Long before “meal prep” became the buzzword of fitness influencers, it was already a way of life beneath the waves. For the men stationed on America’s nuclear submarines, food was not just a necessity. It was logistics, morale, and mission readiness all served on a tray. And no tradition captures that strange and vital blend better than something called “Soupdown.”
A June 20, 1966, article in The Latrobe Bulletin revealed an unexpected truth about nuclear-powered submarines. These engineering marvels had nearly unlimited endurance thanks to their reactors, but their patrols were always limited by one thing. Not fuel. Food. The galley, not the engine room, was what dictated the mission clock.
That’s where Soupdown came in.
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