Come along with me on a journey to Norway as I spend a full day eating Norwegian Arctic Field Rations (AFR)! In this MRE review and taste test, I take on three different menus to see how these ...
The MRE promise is right there in the name: it's a meal, ready to eat. Although they generally taste better heated up, they are designed to be eaten cold as well, just in case you find yourself behind ...
For decades, soldiers at Fort Liberty and around the world have eaten Meals, Ready-to-Eat, or MREs in combat or field conditions — but how do they actually taste? Nearly every servicemember has an ...
NATICK, Mass. — The U.S. military calls its combat field rations MREs, for Meals, Ready to Eat, since they require no cooking. But the troops long ago decided that those initials stood for Meals ...
A New Zealand Army soldier tries a US military MRE — or Meal, Ready-to-Eat — and compares it to New Zealand MREs. An MRE is designed to sustain soldiers during training or an operation while ...
Will this newer Ukrainian 24 Hr. MRE be better than the my first Ukrainian 24 Hr. MRE I reviewed? Come along on this journey ...
A typical U.S. Army Meal, Ready-to-Eat. Christopherlin, via Wikimedia Commons No matter who they’re fighting for, soldiers around the world have something very basic in common: they need to eat.
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As stated in Chapter 1, the Committee on Military Nutrition Research (CMNR) was asked to address five specific questions dealing with strategies to overcome underconsumption of military operational ...
Food rations served to today’s troops in the field have come a long way from what their fathers or even their grandfathers knew. No longer does the modern warrior have to fumble with can openers to ...