Mexican Army ration
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2012 12:32 am
I'm not sure if this has been discussed before, but does anyone know what the Mexican Army has for rations? I'm wondering if theirs are similar to Spanish rations or totally different.
Because everything tastes good when you're hungry!
https://www.mreinfo.com/forums/
google mexican rationsMexicoThe Mexican defense department (SEDENA) issues the "Ración Diaria Individual de Combate" box or "individual soldiers daily combat meal" box. It is packaged in an olive green and black plastic box with the contents printed on the front, the box contains three individual meal packs containing 3,640 to 4,030 calorie meals which are meant to sustain a soldier for a day. Each individual meal package contains a 2 main retort pouches which are meant to be eaten with each other. The first retort pouch usually contains a meat product (such as beef, pork, sausage, fish, ham, seafood, chicken, tuna, bacon or other meats which are usually mixed with a flavoring sauce and vegetables) the second retort pouch contains a staple food (rice, hominy, noodles, beans, pasta, eggs or more vegetables). Each meal package also contains salt, spices, condensed milk, cream, butter, chorizo spread, dried fruit or preserves, bread, crackers, sugar, custard, cookies, canned fish, cocoa mix, nuts, chocolate or other candies, vitamins, a large pouch of drinking water, a pouch of Jumex fruit juice or Coca-cola, biodegradable napkins and untensils and water purification tablets. Some meal packages do not contain the two main retort pouches and instead contain a single larger pouch with a finished meal such as tamales or steak and eggs but, these are usually only available when close to a base or when the military is operating in an urban area. When these were handed out by the Mexican military during their assistance in the Hurricane Katrina relief operation many Americans who received them gave very high praise about their taste and variety.
True. Even the unit that crossed to the US was unarmed.rationtin440 wrote:Sorry to go off topic for a sec, but as for people getting upset about Mexican troops? When/if Mexican troops cross the border wearing blue helmets and "UN" stenciled on their vehicles with UN flags replacing Mexico's flag, along with other countries forces, then they/we will know we're being invaded. Until then, we should be thanking the people of Mexico.