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Face of Defense: Navy Cook’s Innovation Improves Food Service
Face of Defence ^

Posted on 02/11/2008 3:45:26 PM PST by SandRat

LASHKAR GAH, Afghanistan, Feb. 11, 2008 – The Afghan kitchen opened the sailor’s eyes and the smoke made them sting. Even fans that run 24 hours a day can’t keep up with the smoke from a dozen or more wood-burning stoves at the new Afghan National Army dining facility here.

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Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class David Crabb, of Navy Embedded Training Team 3-205th Garrison, makes a suggestion to Abdul Sami, the noncommissioned officer in charge of the Afghan National Army’s Shorabak Garrison dining facility. Crabb advises Sami and other Afghan kitchen staff on sanitation, hygiene and proper food preparation as a member of a 14-man mentoring team. He also suggests facility and process improvements that will help the ANA modernize its food service for 205th Corps soldiers stationed in Afghanistan’s Helmand province. Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek, USA
  

(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class David Crabb, of Navy Embedded Training Team 3-205th Garrison, has been helping the Afghan National Army improve its food service at the Shorabak Garrison dining facility since he arrived in September.

Mentoring the Afghan kitchen staff requires experience and initiative. Crabb has both. The former submarine sailor has 26 years of food service experience, 16 with the Navy. During a 10-year break in active service, he worked as a manager and trainer in a deli and bakery for a supermarket chain, which he said helps him mentor here.

Crabb also returned to his basic Navy culinary training to teach the Afghans. In fact, he uses a Navy supply publication as a reference for instructing them on food preparation, hygiene and sanitation.

Sanitation is particularly important, because most of the Afghans troops’ food is prepared on site. While the facility itself may be new, many of the methods that the cooks use aren’t. It’s not unusual to see bare-handed cooks, or butchers chopping up beef on the ground with an axe.

The team’s medical mentor, Navy Lt. Paul Shattuck, arranged for an Afghan army doctor to teach a class on personal hygiene. Simple steps like hand washing are important because they can easily reduce the risk of pathogens and food-borne illnesses. There was an outbreak of dysentery shortly before the team arrived, but none since its members began their mentoring.

Process improvements made by the team have helped the Afghans become better organized. The dining facility staff now holds a morning formation at 9 a.m., for instance, and has a chart to help them understand their chain of command and duties.

This level of organization may be typical for the Navy, but it is new for the Afghans. Until Crabb’s team got here, the facility didn’t even have personnel assigned to clean up after meals. He got them that additional help from Afghan army battalions at Shorabak.

“We’re trying to show them how to be organized, not shove regulations down their throat,” he said.

The team also has made facility improvements. On this particular day, a welder’s sparks flew from the bottom of an overturned sink as Crabb stood talking with Abdul Sami, his Afghan counterpart. They stopped to watch workers attach new filters under sinks that had been prone to clogging with food. Crabb had researched and submitted a request for the system as a way to prevent that.

He also devised a drainage system for liquid waste from the butcher shop and leveled a flood-prone area behind the building.

Plans for the dining facility include converting it to gas-burning stoves. The Afghan cooks have never used gas before and have been reluctant to give up their wood-burning stoves, but when the smoke clears, this sailor said he thinks they’ll see the light.

(From a Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan news release.)

Related Sites:
Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan
Combined Joint Task Force 82
NATO International Security Assistance Force
Click photo for screen-resolution image Army Sgt. 1st Class Brian Simmons directs Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class David Crabb, of Navy Embedded Training Team 3-205th Garrison, on where to throw a hand grenade during weapons familiarization training. Simmons and Crabb practiced throwing grenades, which Crabb had never done before. Both work out of Forward Operating Base Tombstone, in Afghanistan’s Helmand province. Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek, USN   
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Click photo for screen-resolution image Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class David Crabb, of Navy Embedded Training Team 3-205th Garrison, and Mohammad Amin, of the Afghan National Army, inspect meat cooking in a 20-gallon pot at the dining facility of Shorabak Garrison. Crabb advises Amin and other Afghan kitchen workers on sanitation, hygiene and proper food preparation as a member of a 14-man mentoring team. He also makes suggestions for facility and process improvements that will help the ANA modernize its food service for 205th Corps soldiers stationed in Afghanistan’s Helmand province. Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek, USN   
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Click photo for screen-resolution image Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class David Crabb, of Navy Embedded Training Team 3-205th Garrison, directs a fork-truck while unloading a load of schoolbooks for local Afghan children. Crabb is part of a 14-man team that mentors the Afghan National Army’s Shorabak Garrison in Afghanistan’s Helmand province. Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek, USA   
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TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: afghanistan; cooks; foodservice; frwn; hygene; innovation

1 posted on 02/11/2008 3:45:34 PM PST by SandRat
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To: 91B; HiJinx; Spiff; MJY1288; xzins; Calpernia; clintonh8r; TEXOKIE; windchime; Grampa Dave; ...
FR WAR NEWS!
If you would like to be added to / removed from FRWN,
please FReepmail Sandrat.

WARNING: FRWN can be an EXTREMELY HIGH-VOLUME PING LIST!!

2 posted on 02/11/2008 3:46:25 PM PST by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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To: SandRat

Little Caesar’s will help him become a franchisee when he retires: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1967578/posts


3 posted on 02/11/2008 3:51:42 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet (Second To None!)
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To: SandRat

Hygiene? We don’t need no steeenking hygiene!


4 posted on 02/11/2008 3:59:09 PM PST by Wally_Kalbacken (Seldom right but never in doubt)
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To: SandRat

That smoke from the cook stoves is probably built into the Afgan taste buds. They will not like the gas stoves ... flavor wise.


5 posted on 02/11/2008 3:59:57 PM PST by Red_Devil 232 (VietVet - USMC All Ready On The Right? All Ready On The Left? All Ready On The Firing Line!)
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To: SandRat
The Afghan kitchen opened the sailor’s eyes and the smoke made them sting. Even fans that run 24 hours a day can’t keep up with the smoke from a dozen or more wood-burning stoves at the new Afghan National Army dining facility here.

Not trying to be sarcastic.....
But it seems to me somebody ain't had much experience with wood burning stoves.
If you make sure the stove "draws" properly, ya won't have problems with smoke.

6 posted on 02/11/2008 4:08:32 PM PST by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! Read it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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