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News | June 15, 2026

Honoring excellence: Why the PAC program matters more than ever

By Army Capt. Brooke De Renzo Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment Commander for the Group Support Battalion at 10th Special Forces (Airborne)

Every year, culinary specialists and food service teams across the U.S. Army take on a unique but crucial challenge: proving themselves in the Philip A. Connelly Program. More than a contest, the PAC Program is a transformative force in Army food service standards, ensuring excellence even in the most austere and demanding field environments.

Origins and mission: The spirit behind the competition

Established in 1968 and named after Master Sergeant Philip A. Connelly — a former president of the International Food Service Executives Association and a lifetime champion of military food service — the program was instituted to drive continuous improvement in Army culinary operations. Jointly sponsored by the National Restaurant Association and the Army’s deputy chief of staff, and administered by the Joint Culinary Center of Excellence, the competition brings the Army’s best food service professionals together to demonstrate mastery, innovation and adaptability in both garrison and field kitchens.

DLA Fact: Defense Logistics Agency Troop Support played a role in supporting the 58th Philip A. Connelly Awards Program by ensuring competing teams had the rations and resources needed to showcase expeditionary culinary excellence. During the initial planning phase, Army Chief Warrant Officer 5 George Davis, Chief Warrant Officer 4 Shemika Harris, and DLA civilians Darryl Thomas and Stephen Whalen coordinated the availability of required unitized group rations for all participating units.
The program’s mission statement, “the personification of food service excellence executed by field feeding teams resulting in the presentation of extremely gratifying dining experiences across all Army field environments,” encapsulates its focus on professionalism, technical skill and soldier support.

How the competition works: More than just cooking

Success in the PAC Program isn’t just about who can make the tastiest meal under pressure. The process itself is rigorous and comprehensive, designed to test technical skill, teamwork and a deep understanding of logistical operations.

This year’s competition highlighted the skill and creativity of 92G Culinary Specialists from installations around the world, who were evaluated on their ability to prepare mission-focused meals using operational feeding systems.

DLA Fact: DLA Troop Support’s Subsistence Supply Chain provides food support for the military all over the world. From individually packaged meals in a soldier’s ruck sack, to a ship’s galley, to full-service dining facilities on military installations, the Subsistence team at DLA Troop Support makes sure that service members around the world have the fuel they need to fight.
The evaluation unfolds in two main phases. In Phase I, units submit a detailed virtual packet, including a mission statement, historical summary, achievements, team profiles, operational plans and action photos from the field. This is followed by a virtual board review where evaluators quiz team members on a range of relevant topics to ensure they can apply military food service doctrine in practice.

Phase II is the hands-on assessment when trained evaluators arrive at the unit’s home station for a full review. Here, teams are observed and rated on a series of critical areas: in-briefs, convoy operations, food and equipment security, setup times, and the practicalities of food preparation and service under field conditions. The checklist is thorough, covering everything from sanitation and nutrition standards to logistical efficiency and the ability to adapt to rapidly changing scenarios, mirroring wartime or training conditions.

Several soldiers in camouflage uniforms prepare food in a field kitchen. One soldier in the foreground is arranging pieces of fried chicken in a large serving pan. In the background, other soldiers are cooking and serving food.
U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Danny Oquendo, a culinary specialist for the 10th Group Special Forces Group Field Feeding Team, prepares chicken wings for lunch service during the Connelly Competition at Pinon Canyon, Colorado, March 25, 2026. The Phillip A. Connelly Competition recognizes the Army’s top field feeding teams for excellence in food service operations and their ability to sustain Soldiers in any environment. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Christian Dela Cruz)
Several soldiers in camouflage uniforms prepare food in a field kitchen. One soldier in the foreground is arranging pieces of fried chicken in a large serving pan. In the background, other soldiers are cooking and serving food.
260324-A-AY818-9325
U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Danny Oquendo, a culinary specialist for the 10th Group Special Forces Group Field Feeding Team, prepares chicken wings for lunch service during the Connelly Competition at Pinon Canyon, Colorado, March 25, 2026. The Phillip A. Connelly Competition recognizes the Army’s top field feeding teams for excellence in food service operations and their ability to sustain Soldiers in any environment. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Christian Dela Cruz)
Photo By: Sgt. Christian Dela Cruz
VIRIN: 260324-A-AY818-9325

Why the PAC Program matters: Training for real-world readiness

DLA Fact: For the event, DLA Troop Support provided Unitized Group Rations — Heat and Serve for breakfast meals, along with UGR-A and UGR-Short Order for lunch service. Required competition meals included:

Breakfast: BF4 — dehydrated eggs, turkey sausage, corned beef hash

Lunch: Menu 7 — Steak

Short order: Menu 3 — smoked chicken wings
At its core, the PAC Program isn’t about pageantry — it’s about preparation. According to the Army Quartermaster Corps, the program’s key objectives include raising the professionalism of Army culinary specialists, providing tangible recognition for excellence, driving measurable operational improvements, and ensuring that cooks are trained to deliver nutritional and safe meals whether in a modern dining facility or an expeditionary field environment.

Field feeding, in particular, is a discipline with great importance. Soldiers in the field face unpredictable and often harsh circumstances that demand not only culinary expertise but also ingenuity, resourcefulness and a deep grasp of logistical and tactical considerations. Feeding soldiers in the field isn’t simply about caloric intake. Good meals are a core building block for morale, a symbol that their well-being is valued, and a literal source of energy for sustaining readiness in high-stakes training and combat environments.

DLA Fact: DLA Troop Support Subsistence provides military field rations known as meals, ready to eat, including kosher and halal meals, as well as unitized group rations for troops in the field.

The team makes sure 1.5 million warfighters are fed each day.
The heightened focus on large-scale combat operations in recent years has only increased the PAC Program’s importance. As the Army prepares for a potential future fight where supply lines can be disrupted, terrain is uncertain, and adaptability is everything, the ability to deploy field kitchens and deliver hot, healthy meals quickly can make a measurable difference in both morale and sustained combat effectiveness.

Modernizing field feeding: Tools and technology

DLA Fact: DLA Troop Support Subsistence offers equipment for preparing food in gallies, dining facilities, and in the field. Field feeding equipment includes kitchen trailers, food sanitization centers and field stoves.
One of the keys to staying ahead in field feeding is embracing innovation and modernization. For years, the containerized kitchen has been the backbone of Army field feeding. This “kitchen in a box” is highly mobile and capable of producing upwards of 650 complete meals three times a day — an impressive feat that has kept countless training and combat operations supplied with hot food. With a preparation window of less than three hours, it embodies the Army’s can-do ethos.

But tomorrow’s battlefield will demand even more. Enter the expeditionary kitchen trailer, which represents a leap forward in agility, efficiency and effectiveness. Thanks to its consolidated design, the EKT reduces the number of vehicles and personnel needed for setup and operation, boosts tactical maneuverability, and slashes fuel and manpower requirements. In testing and field exercises, it has already shown promise in supporting LSCO and other future-oriented operations.

Three soldiers in camouflage uniforms are in a food service line. The soldier in the center is opening a large foil bag over a steam table that contains various hot food dishes. The soldier on the left is looking on, and the soldier on the right is holding a foil-wrapped item.
U.S. Army Spc. Joel Avilla, along with Staff Sgt. Andrea Diamond and Sgt. Alejandro Barrera, culinary specialist assigned to 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) Field Feeding Team, prepares breakfast during the Connelly Competition at Pinon Canyon, Colorado, March 25, 2026. The Phillip A. Connelly Competition recognizes the Army’s top field feeding teams for excellence in food service operations and their ability to sustain Soldiers in any environment. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Christian Dela Cruz)
Three soldiers in camouflage uniforms are in a food service line. The soldier in the center is opening a large foil bag over a steam table that contains various hot food dishes. The soldier on the left is looking on, and the soldier on the right is holding a foil-wrapped item.
260324-A-AY818-1331
U.S. Army Spc. Joel Avilla, along with Staff Sgt. Andrea Diamond and Sgt. Alejandro Barrera, culinary specialist assigned to 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) Field Feeding Team, prepares breakfast during the Connelly Competition at Pinon Canyon, Colorado, March 25, 2026. The Phillip A. Connelly Competition recognizes the Army’s top field feeding teams for excellence in food service operations and their ability to sustain Soldiers in any environment. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Christian Dela Cruz)
Photo By: Sgt. Christian Dela Cruz
VIRIN: 260324-A-AY818-1331

A case in point: 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) setting the bar

No exploration of the PAC Program’s value would be complete without a spotlight on units that exemplify its standards. The 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) is one such standout.

DLA Fact: Every year, the Subsistence team at DLA Troop Support starts working in the spring to make sure service men and women around the world have traditional Thanksgiving and Christmas meals. Bringing that taste of home isn’t a light lift — over 150,000 pounds of turkey and 124,000 pounds of beef were delivered in time for the 2025 holiday season.
Every year, the 10th SFG(A) Dining Facility PAC Team enters into the competition with one goal: to set the standard for excellence in Army culinary operations. With a full slate of rigorous daily training and support responsibilities — including high-profile field training like cold-weather training, special forces basic combat course support, and special operations mountain warfare training — this team manages a subsistence budget exceeding a million dollars annually and handles sophisticated logistics from containerized kitchens to tactical vehicles.

Despite persistent staffing shortages — maintaining exceptional standards with just 13 assigned personnel out of an authorized 37 — the team consistently provides reliable meal service and executes complex field feeding support across the group. Their work during events — such as the 2025 Thanksgiving meal, where they served nearly 500 service members and their families — underscores both the operational and morale benefits of elite food service.

Crucially, their commitment to continual improvement goes beyond just winning awards. Coordinating with organizations like U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command, Army Food Advisors and industry partners, the team trains on cutting-edge gear like the EKT and experimental sanitation trailers, as well as advanced tracking and drone systems for supply management. This ensures their skills and technologies are on the leading edge.

Their approach: executing repeated full-scale rehearsals, participating in emerging technology training, collaborating with external experts, and prioritizing real-world readiness as much as competition performance. This relentless pursuit of mastery ensures that whatever the future battlefield demands, Army field feeding teams will be up to the challenge.

A soldier in a camouflage uniform and cap stands inside a screened tent, eating a meal. Another person is partially visible in the foreground.
Chief Warrant Officer 5 Charles Hunter, U.S. Army Reserve Command G-4 food advisor, receives a meal prepared by Soldiers assigned to the 731st Quartermaster Company during the evaluation operations portion of the Philip A. Connelly Competition at Camp Santiago Joint Training Center, Puerto Rico, March 19, 2026. The Department of the Army-level evaluation measures field feeding capabilities and ensures operational readiness, technical proficiency, and compliance with Army field feeding doctrine, food safety requirements and competition standards. (U.S. Army Reserve photo by Staff Sgt. David Cook)
A soldier in a camouflage uniform and cap stands inside a screened tent, eating a meal. Another person is partially visible in the foreground.
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Chief Warrant Officer 5 Charles Hunter, U.S. Army Reserve Command G-4 food advisor, receives a meal prepared by Soldiers assigned to the 731st Quartermaster Company during the evaluation operations portion of the Philip A. Connelly Competition at Camp Santiago Joint Training Center, Puerto Rico, March 19, 2026. The Department of the Army-level evaluation measures field feeding capabilities and ensures operational readiness, technical proficiency, and compliance with Army field feeding doctrine, food safety requirements and competition standards. (U.S. Army Reserve photo by Staff Sgt. David Cook)
Photo By: Staff Sgt. David Cook
VIRIN: 260319-A-FN863-3571

Why this all truly matters

So what’s at stake in a food service competition? Far more than a ribbon or a medal. The PAC Program is a force multiplier for the entire Army. Here’s why:

Operational readiness: Well-trained field feeding teams are a cornerstone of sustained combat operations, enabling units to endure, adapt and win even when resources or supply lines are strained.

Morale and retention: The tangible boost in morale delivered by a hot, quality meal in tough conditions cannot be overstated. Feeling cared for sustains spirits, keeps teams focused and reinforces a sense of purpose in the ranks.

Innovation and adaptability: PAC fosters innovation, whether it’s learning to use new kitchen systems, optimizing logistics or developing procedures that translate to flexible real-world operations.

Professional development: By elevating the profile and professionalism of culinary specialists, the competition provides a career-enhancing platform to help develop leaders who will shape future operations.

Army transformation: As Army operations evolve, so do the demands on support roles. The PAC Program ensures that food service keeps pace, not simply surviving, but thriving, as a vital part of operational transformation.

DLA Fact: By aligning logistics planning with culinary execution, DLA Troop Support continues to strengthen readiness and ensure warfighters worldwide receive reliable, high-quality field feeding support.
The bottom line: The PAC Program is about building forces that can fight, win and recover, wherever and whenever needed. It recognizes and sharpens the skills that make that possible. As the 10th SFG(A) PAC Team demonstrates, the pursuit of field feeding excellence isn’t just about being the best at mealtime. It’s about standing ready for any challenge: anytime, anywhere.

Brooke C. De Renzo is a captain in the U.S. Army. She earned an Master of Arts in Urban and Public Affairs from the University of San Francisco, where she participated in the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps program. She is currently serving as the Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment Commander for the Group Support Battalion at 10th Special Forces (Airborne).

Read more from this June 2026 edition of Loglines or browse more editions of the magazine on the Loglines Magazine website.