| Tuesday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM, 5–6:30 PM |
| Wednesday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM, 5–6:30 PM |
| Thursday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM, 5–6:30 PM |
| Friday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM, 5–6:30 PM |
| Saturday | 9:30 AM–1 PM, 4–5:30 PM |
| Sunday | 9:30 AM–1 PM, 4–5:30 PM |
| Monday | 7:30–9 AM, 11:30 AM–1 PM, 5–6:30 PM |
Zach
The place was very clean, the food was portioned fine, and the food was seasoned. The vegetables and fruit were fresh and not wilted. Can’t ask for much more from a dfac.
… moreHayden Eaves
Working weekend shift duty and had some time to go grab lunch, options were limited to mainly breakfast items. When I asked for a To-Go tray they said no.
… moreLeon Capers
Poor food choices, sometimes overcook or undercooked the food, OR if you are lucky, you could get served uncooked. Yes, uncooked, not to mention they do not provide many food options if you can not eat certain things. The amount of food given is a comparison of old-time 2000s middle school portions after the health eating plan was admitted, which is abysmal compared to soldiers having more money taken from them automatically when they would be better of buying food from the commissary
… moreSeth Worrell
Turning soldiers away after deployment because of system issues not the fault of the soldier is crazy. What Army is this, haven’t seen this in 8 years of serving. First, we find out Army wide our BAS is not being used for the DFAC appropriately. Now we can’t even eat at a DFAC when they’re going to take the money back. Make it make sense.
… moreTommy Figiel
It’s a small DFAC, but once you learn which line is which, you can quickly move to the right line, grab your food, and be on your way.
Sometimes, they run out of ‘to goes’ and the managerial staff has to get creative. But taking a seat is by no means uncomfortable.
… moreChristopher Williams
The dfac has came a long way since a few years ago, the food has its days sometimes over cooked sometimes undercooked but sometimes just right it’s a gamble, drink machines are typically empty, the food is unhealthy and hard to track proper calorie intake from the food.
The atmosphere is very plain and simple
Finally, can we add proper pictures for this review page there’s only one picture and it’s a person who just finished their plate with a dirty fork with pink sludge on it as the only photo, need a picture of the outside, the food lines, sitting area and drink area, when there is no one inside of the building needs new photos for this review page.
… moredaniel halprin
Overall quality isn’t bad, food prices are high especially if you don’t live in the Barracks. Value for quality of food to what you have to pay isn’t great. Overall not to bad.
… moreKing Crimson
There’s definitely room for improvement. The food is at best subpar. I know that they have recipe cards to follow and portions that are to be adhered to but still it’s no excuse for tags not being properly displayed or completely absent describing what it is I’m hoping to eat. The cooks serving the “food” didn’t even know what they were serving. This is definitely my BAS deduction hard at work. For the 350 or 360 bucks a month I can have more tasteful food and I wouldn’t walk into a DFAC hungry and leave starved. 2 stars out of 5 because I’m hoping for improvement.
… moreSean Lewis
Not only did a helpful soldier get us to the Patriot Inn, but when our group got there, another soldier helped us get salad dressing. The food was awesome, service was great and everyone was helpful. We’ll definitely be back!
… moreClayton Killion
Drink machines are consistently down, and the cooks are stingy about handing out food, considering that money is being taken out of my paycheck for this I’d expect better, I’ve been to dfac overseas, and it has all none of these problems.
… more