What does it take to feed an army? Chow chat at the Edmonton Garrison - Action News
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What does it take to feed an army? Chow chat at the Edmonton Garrison

Tucked in the pocket of Cpl. Colton Walsh's crisp, white chef coat is a bunch of plastic spoons.

Serving up a side of morale along with 10,000 loaves of bread, 180,000 eggs and 1,700 litres of ketchup a year

Cpl. Colton Walsh transfers a batch of butter chicken from a vat to serving trays to feed the troops. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

Tucked in the pocket of Cpl.Colton Walsh's crisp, white chef coat isa bunch of plastic spoons.

The taste-testing utensils help him ensure thehuge vat of butter chicken he's making is up to scratch for today'slunchtime rush.

'Cooking for an army'

7 years ago
Duration 3:29
See what it takes to keep the kitchen at CFB Edmonton chugging along with military precision.

The 28-year-old soldier bops from the stainless steel stoves, to the preparation stations, to the front serving line at the Edmonton Garrison combined mess.

"It gets pretty hectic, sometimes to the point where you're literally going non-stop," Walsh admits.

"I try to cook at home and I always just make up too much food and I have leftovers for weeks because when I come here I'm so used to cooking for an army," he said.

Master Cpl.Josh Falconer, 28, feeds off themealtime rush.
Master Cpl. Josh Falconer overseas the operations in the Edmonton Garrison kitchen with military precision. (John Robertson/CBC)

"I like the adrenalin and I enjoy pushing out great meals and having guys coming up and saying, 'Hey, that was the best,' " he said.

On this day the lunch crowd numbers 200, but that count can balloon to thousands when the base hosts special events and training exercises or when packing ration boxes.

Sometimes the staff aren't concocting cuisine in the comfort of their kitted out commercial kitchen on base.

Falconerrecounts cooking in the cold and dark out of the back of a food trailer near Wainwright east of Edmonton.

"To create meals out in a remote location like that,it's a little awkward.It's somethingyou got to to get used to."

Cpl. Cory Bell has been there. The 38-year-old cook has deployed alongside his unit on training exercises and recent missions in Ukraine and Poland.
Cpl. Cory Bell dishes out the marching orders for the lunchtime rush. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

Bell takes pride in knowing what the troops enjoysand how they like it served.

"They're spending long days outside. They're freezing cold by the time they come back in, right? So they're looking for hot meals, and they're looking for a friendly face."

At times Cpl.Colton Walsh knows he's dishing out a side order of morale along with a home-cooked meal.

"Because honestly sometimes they can have the worst day in their life and they can come in and have the best meal and all of a sudden cheer up again," he said.

You can see more from the military base on this week's Our Edmonton Sunday and Monday at 11 a.m. on CBC TV.
Ration boxes are stacked at the back of the kitchen getting prepped to go out to troops. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)