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American forces press service (Aug. 3, 2004): experts develop future food for future warriors.


WASHINGTON -- The Defense Department's Combat Feeding program at the U.S. Army Soldier System Center in Natick, Mass., is a "one-stop shop One-Stop Shop

A company or a location that offers a multitude of services to a client or a customer. The idea is to provide convenient and efficient service and also to create the opportunity for the company to sell more products to clients and customers.
 for all combatrations development, field food-service equipment, and total combat feeding systems," according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the Defense Department's combat-feeding director.

Gerald Darsch said the joint-service program is an effort to provide not only the appropriate types and distribution of food needed by the military services, but also to supply food products to astronauts at the International Space Station.

Combat rations and their distribution have improved considerably over the last five to seven years, Darsch said. The Combat Feeding program elicits "what soldiers like to eat and what they don't like to eat. All of the rations are soldier-requested, soldier-tested, soldier-approved."

When servicemembers ask for a certain food item, such as Spanish rice or Thai chicken, food specialists develop recipes that will meet the request.

Test panels are randomly selected to evaluate recipes during development. Once a recipe is finished, it is field tested with soldiers to ensure the goal is met.

One type of ration ration

a fixed allowance of total feed for an animal for one day. Usually specifies the individual ingredients and their amounts and the amounts of the specific nutriments such as carbohydrate, fiber, individual minerals and vitamins.
, the Meal, Ready-to-Eat The Meal, Ready-to-Eat, or MRE (pronounced "M-R-E") is a self-contained, individual field ration in lightweight packaging procured by the United States military for its service-members for use in combat or other field conditions where organized food facilities are not , or MRE MRE
abbr.
meal ready to eat
, is currently used by the military to sustain individuals in the field until an organized food facility is established.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

At present, mobile troops, who may not have much time to eat, take out only certain food components from the MRE rations. "They leave up to 50 percent of the unused portion behind, only to be thrown away," Darsch noted.

The prototype "First Strike" ration program provides highly mobile ground troops with total eat-on-the-move capability. He said the idea is to provide a single ration per day containing only food items that are easy to use and consume.

Recently, both the Marines and Army soldiers have requested First Strike rations The First Strike Ration (FSR) is a compact, eat-on-the move ration concept from the United States Army, designed to be consumed during the first 72 hours of conflict, created by the United States Army Soldier Systems Center in Natick, Massachusetts.  developed by the Combat Feeding program.

"The Marines have asked for these rations to use in Afghanistan and Iraq," Darsch said. "[The Army's] 1st Cavalry cavalry, a military force consisting of mounted troops trained to fight from horseback. Horseback riding probably evolved independently in the Eurasian steppes and the mountains above the Mesopotamian plain. By 1400 B.C.  Division in Iraq has also requested to try these rations for their soldiers." Both Services said it would provide a capability they really don't have, he added.

Darsch said this ration package includes a pocket sandwich A pocket sandwich is a sandwich which is made using a single piece of folded or hollowed bread, such as a pita (Syrian bread) or tortilla, or which is made from dough cooked with fillings inside.  with a three-year shelf life at room temperature, developed by the Army Soldier Center. This sandwich is a good idea for those who can't take a microwave or refrigerator out in the field, he added.

"We put three zip-lock bags in with the rations, so the person can break it up into three separate meals and easily store unused portions in the uniform pockets, wherever is most comfortable and fits the best," he explained. "The beverage mix included with the rations is in a flexible package so you can reconstitute re·con·sti·tute  
tr.v. re·con·sti·tut·ed, re·con·sti·tut·ing, re·con·sti·tutes
1. To provide with a new structure: The parks commission has been reconstituted.

2.
 it right in the package and consume it directly from the package."

Tube food, another type of ration, has been provided for the Air Force's U-2 long-range surveillance aircraft pilots during their reconnaissance This article or section needs copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone and/or spelling.
You can assist by [ editing it] now.
 flights. According to Air Force officials, the U-2 is the most difficult aircraft to fly because of its unusually challenging takeoff and landing characteristics. Due to its high-altitude mission, pilots must wear full pressure suits.

The Combat Feeding program, in a joint effort with the Air Force Research Lab, developed two foods that actually enhance the pilots' cognitive performance.

After the pilots have been flying their aircraft for a long period of time, they can become lethargic and sluggish when they try to land. Darsch explained that adding a certain naturally occurring food ingredient to the tube foods ensures a safe landing.

The Natick research center also has launched a robust program to upgrade food-distribution systems for the Navy fleet. Darsch described how they recently used a new modular process to install a piece of food-distribution equipment on two Los Angeles-class submarines.

In the past, crewmembers would have had to cut up the equipment deckside and lower in the pieces one at a time through a 30-inch hatch and reassemble re·as·sem·ble  
v. re·as·sem·bled, re·as·sem·bling, re·as·sem·bles

v.tr.
1. To bring or gather together again: reassembled the band for a reunion tour.

2.
 all of those pieces down in the galley galley, long, narrow vessel widely used in ancient and medieval times, propelled principally by oars but also fitted with sails. The earliest type was sometimes 150 ft (46 m) long with 50 oars. , he said. This old process required up to 500 manhours. And once everything was put back together, it didn't always work or didn't work as well as intended.

The Combat Feeding program worked with a commercial company to come up with equipment designed and built in modules.

"The new idea is to lower the modules down through the hatch and then put the pieces together again, like LEGO[R] bricks, in the galley," Darsch said. "This now reduces the 500 manhours down to possibly less than 75 manhours to complete this task. And now, everything works the way it is supposed to work."

The bottom line, he concluded, is that the Combat Feeding program covers the gamut See color gamut.

gamut - The gamut of a monitor is the set of colours it can display. There are some colours which can't be made up of a mixture of red, green and blue phosphor emissions and so can't be displayed by any monitor.
 of everything required for feeding the armed forces "from deep sea to deep space."
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:IN THE NEWS
Author:Copeland, Phil
Publication:Defense AT & L
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2004
Words:785
Previous Article:American forces press service (Aug. 2, 2004): Coast Guard modernization moves full steam ahead.(IN THE NEWS)
Next Article:Army news service (Aug. 3, 2004): Task Force Logistics restructures theater support.(IN THE NEWS)
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