MRE stands for “Meals Ready to Eat.” This is what soldiers in battle zones survive on for weeks, even months at a time. They have a reputation for tasting like cardboard, and completely blah. Many times all you have to do is just add hot water. Although most people don’t realize it, MRE technology has come a long way since WWII. Not so long ago my office was above the lab where astronaut MREs are made, and let me tell you, I tried some great stuff. Now it seems that British soldiers will be getting chicken tikka masala as part of their battlefield rations:
An Army marches on its stomach and the British troops will soon have Indian curry, chicken balti and pulau rice on its ration instead of tinned cheese, stodgy casseroles and stale biscuits.
In the biggest change to the armed forces’ rations for 40 years, a new generation of meals are currently being tried out that are not only supposed to taste better, but embrace healthy eating as well, a spokesman of the Ministry of Defence has said.
Designed to last for up to three years in any climate, the new boil-in-the bag meals have been brought in by the ministry to try to calm discontent in the ranks over outdated menus, as well as complaints about the quality of British ration packs compared to the ones given in the US.
I’m not surprised. Indian food IS the most popular food in England. But won’t the soldiers need fennel seeds afterwards also?
Well, these guys (and gals) deserve a good curry, that’s for sure.
I have no idea if this story is true but a friend of mine relayed it to me and I thought it was funny: it had to do with some joint training excercises somewhere including French and British soldiers. The most popular meals ready to eat were the French ones because they came with little ‘burners’ so that you could kind of ‘grill’ the meal. Watching my friend mime this, all French like, was priceless (and no, that was not gratuitous French bashing, it was just funny the way he mimed a soldier grilling some ready to eat steaklet).
The weird thing about English Indian food is that almost all the chefs are Bangladeshi, from a small area. So you have these Bangladeshi guys cooking North Indian food. This is one of the reasons why BritAsian tastes … different.
Then again, many of the top line chefs in NYC at fancy French restaurants are from a small region in Mexico, so …