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I’m going to be doing 92G (culinary specialist/ food service) for the U.S army and wanted to hear some different opinions on the MOS. Especially if you also had or have this MOS i would definitely love to hear what you feel about it.
Posted 5 y ago
Responses: 13
You and your team mates have IMMENSE impact on soldier morale, good and bad. Lots of shift work. It really depends on what you want to do. There are competitions (I've led a Connelly Award team, field feeding category, won FORSCOM level) where if you win at Army level you could get a scholarship to Johnson and Wales. Some of the most impressive food and decorating displays I have ever seen, including in house ice sculptures border on the five star professional, especially at a thanks giving. As a more senior 92G, you are managing dining facilities, forecasting supplies, managing menus, creative rearrangement of standard rations to create variety, and making decisions on workload to support multiple missions. I've met good and I've met bad, but the good ones, were the Best. SFC Lloyd, SFC Jim Denett, MSG Ricky Morris are just a few of the greats.
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SPC Michael Kilby
MAJ Ken L. - there's only so much love you can put into the food, at lease at the DFAC. You have to follow recipe cards to the T, no more no less. If we got caught adding anything it would be a bad day for us. Now when I was in Afghanistan, we threw that out the window. I made my own seasonings and sauces. we cooked off of an MKT for about 90 soldiers. We were on a tiny FOB on the side of a mountain. We found out later people on the other COPs and other FOBs would volunteer to visit for various missions because they heard about our food. It was a great feeling!
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I give them credit; it's an important, but unsung task. They work crazy hours sometimes, and out in the field, I have to believe it's hotter than hell in their mobile kitchens, but if "an army moves on it's stomach", then it's the cooks you can thank for that.
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Cons: shift work, working in the kitchen all the time (kitchens all look the same), carpal tunnel, smelling like onions
Pros: shift work, advanced culinary opportunities, lots of room for promotion, generals aide, can work at any location and organization, your time in the field is pretty clean and well fed, offers a pathway into logistics
Basically, it's a fairly normal job, and it offers lots of good opportunities if you want to work a bit harder than your peers to stand out. The shift work can make it hard to stay in shape, but the steady schedule can also make it easier to plan for completing college courses.
Pros: shift work, advanced culinary opportunities, lots of room for promotion, generals aide, can work at any location and organization, your time in the field is pretty clean and well fed, offers a pathway into logistics
Basically, it's a fairly normal job, and it offers lots of good opportunities if you want to work a bit harder than your peers to stand out. The shift work can make it hard to stay in shape, but the steady schedule can also make it easier to plan for completing college courses.
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