Home | Sitemap | RSS Feed | Bookmak Us
You are: Home>Cuisine>

    What kind of food is served in prison?

  • Views:    Font: [ Large Medium Small ]
Here are some friends with simlar question as we.And I have this question for many days,anyone help us?
Kitty said: Yes.What kind of food is served in prison?-I try seach this on internet but no results found.Maybe this is a stupid question.
Mike said: oh,no,you are wrong.I have found as below for this question(What kind of food is served in prison?),it will help you,my kids.



Answer:
According to Inside Edition Paris HIlton will be getting three low-sodium meals a day only one of which is hot and it's poultry based. So basically I'm guessing cheap food that meets USDA requirements.
they usually serve gruel... its like a mixture of a whole bunch of stuff. my cousin is in prison and he said its disgusting and he has tried to figure out what is in it but its hard to tell.
Cheap. Well only in Arizona where the Maracopa County Jail serves inmates bologna sandwiches 3 meals a day. Actually the food in prison is the same as any other institution, hospitals, schools and the military. Food is prepared in large kitchens, in large quantities, with little extra seasonings (to cater to all tastes). Menu items are reserved to things that can be cooked in bulk, pot roasts, stews, casseroles, scrambled eggs, mashed potatoes, boiled veges, etc. There is, most likely, a lot of attention paid to nutrition now.
Regular staple food, i.e. Roast beef, macaroni, roast pork, lasagna, spaghetti, meat & Potatoes, pot roast, veggies of all types.
I want to say that if the food is too good, inmates would want to stay longer.
But if the food is not good enough there would be prison inmate riots.
The prison system cannot win either way.


Read this: All the information of cooking and health post by website user,chineseop.com not guarantee
correctness,It's Non-profit and only for informational purposes.

PRE: What kind of food/grocery items that have no expiry?   NEXT: What kind of food is Grogie? And what is it?