Hours
| Sunday | Closed |
| Monday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM |
| Tuesday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM |
| Wednesday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM |
| Thursday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM |
| Friday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM |
| Saturday | Closed |
Menu Photos
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Reviews
Navy UDT disabled veteran soldier 72
We have experienced some of our greatest times together having lunch at this facility! The employees and staff, company and community members all are an excellent team and always make our experience extremely memorable and exquisite!!!
Thank you Fort Sill Army team ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Breakfast features a custom omelet station, four fresh fruits, and a number of rotating main and side items to the delight of all soldiers. Morale is not gained but transcended in a DFAC experience that extinguishes the fervent hunger of soldiers from Ft. Sill and abroad. Themed lunches act as teleportation whether it be Taco Tuesday basking in the sun with a Gulf breeze at Cozumel beach or the island of Sicily with a Mediterranean Sea view when delectable Italian dishes decide to emerge. Soul food Thursday leaves patrons in a baptismal bliss that some have claimed as their spiritual reawakening. Sports beverages and soda flow as if they were natural springs. Delectable desserts are scattered atop the salad bar and given their rightful place inside a glass refrigerator, showcasing the most beloved pies and cakes.
It is for these reasons I amass the most ardent accreditation to the Guns and Rockets dining facility for its unwavering dedication to the military culinary arts and satisfaction for all those who attend. You can call Guns and Rockets your base piece, best firing team, regularly exceeding expectations, and looked to, as the high standard for all dining facilities to follow. Fire Strong!
It was a tremendous Honor and a Privilege for me to sit among those guy’s, other Warriors and have a meal with them.
I’m a former Artillery Cannoneer from 1971 and attended the Fort Sill Artillery School and graduated 3rd. in my Class June 1971. I was assigned to the 3rd. Infantry Division up close to the East German / Czech border.
You would think Divarty would put me in as an FO. Hell no, they put me as a Driver and Loader on an M109A1, of which I had no experience nor any training on that Howitzer Gun System. I trained on the M101A1 and the M102 Duce. No one wants to ever get into an Arm Wrestling Contest with a Cannoneer that’s been a Loader for any length of time.
You’ll know what I’m referring to when you Breech Sling 3,000 lbs. of 155mm Projectiles during the course of a Fire Mission. You can easily Finger Flip Fire with your 2 fingers the Firing Mechanism that you insert into the Breech Block without having to use that confounded lanyard you can’t find half the time.
The meal’s are so much better when you get to you Divisional Unit.