We all know pizza tastes just as good the next day -- but what about next year, or the year after? U.S. Military MRE Pizza ...
The U.S. military calls its combat field rations MREs, for Meals, Ready to Eat, since they require no cooking. But troops long ago decided those initials stood for Meals Refused by Everyone. The stuff ...
Pizza with a three-year shelf life will soon be joining the US Army's field rations menu. These infamous MREs (Meal, Ready to Eat) have a long and checkered history, acquiring such sobriquets over the ...
Close your eyes. Now, think of the most delicious food imaginable. If you’re picturing, say, a hamburger or a bowl of mom’s spaghetti, you’re wrong. It’s pizza. Or, as it will soon be known in the ...
Soldiers with the 4th Infantry Division at Fort Carson, Colorado, try the pizza MRE in 2014. After more recent modifications, now it's ready to be packaged into MREs. (David Kamm/U.S. Army Natick ...
The Army has been getting requests for a pizza version of its meal, ready-to-eat for decades. Army food scientists began work on it in 2012. Despite some hiccups in the development process, the Army ...
An Army laboratory has figured out how to make ready-to-eat pizza that lasts for three years, and perhaps most surprisingly, it actually tastes good. "It's a fully assembled and baked piece of pizza ...
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — Bad news for troops hoping to feast on a pizza MRE in 2018. A problem with mass production has delayed the new meal offering, and it's unclear when or if the issue can be resolved.
Army field rations have lacked pizza as an option until now. NPR's Renee Montagne asks food scientist Michelle Richardson how the Army finally produced a palatable pizza for troops in the field. An ...
We may receive a commission on purchases made from links. You've heard the saying that there's no such thing as bad pizza, but we are here to heartily disagree. When pizza is good, it's nothing short ...