Fried spam and taters with a fried egg on top....mmmmmmmmmmmmmm!
I think my favorite mess hall dish was Yakisoba (sp?). It was the spaghetti noodles with ground beef and onions/peppers - no tomato sauce. I could eat myself sick on that stuff
I stayed at VBC in Baghdad, and at Camp Lemmonier in Djibouti, so the chow when I was deployed was superior. In Baghdad, we had steak and lobster every Friday, and the big chow hall on the base where the generals and the VIP's frequented had TCN's (Third-Country Nationals) dressed in white shirts and bow ties serving to order dishes - and they were VERY good. Me and the other dirty joes didn't go there very often because we usually got harassed by a CSM or two - my unit actually got banned from there for the latter half of the tour. But that was okay because we were force protection for the SOCOM base, and all I'll say is those guys are EXTREMELY resourceful
The chow hall at Camp Lemmonier, a naval base, was pretty big, and they served prime rib - pretty darned good prime rib too - every weekend. We also had made to order omlettes and burgers and things of that flat grill nature
One thing about my wartime experience is we ate like kings. That's not true of everybody though. The guys who stayed out in the COP's had to ration and scrounge a bit. We always tried to score stuff for them when they came through our ECP's. Though, in Baghdad, the local food was often incredible, can't say the same for Djibouti
I loved trading and mixing things in the MRE's when we were in the field. A few of my favorites were to take the sugar cookie and crumble it into the apples in cinnamon, then mix it with the vanilla shake drink mix - it tasted like apple pie with ice cream - and the peanut butter mixed great with the brownie or the rare and highly coveted chocolate peanut butter, the jalapeno cheese was a great addition to the Mexican rice (a splash of Tabasco too of course). The cheese with the bacon in it was a great spread on the crackers or even the cardbread (cardboard-bread). The best part about the MRE's was making the bombs though. We actually came up with a way to launch them through tubes, though I forget exactly what we did to do that. The field was great fun. I miss those times, but I don't think I'd want to go back though