Heh heh heh...that cook is so done with Hawkeye's sh*t. He's seen 'em come and he's seen 'em go. He might be a lowly sergeant, but he's king of his kitchen.
"Gently, soaking the bread into the froth!" 😂😂😂 I LOVED that cook and his "wiseguy" retorts when someone came in the kitchen and tried to tell him how to cook: so IN YOUR FACE !! 😂😂😂
Remembered this scene from decades ago and was trying to find it. Googled all sorts of stuff, and what finally worked was: "mash scene pinch." Thanks for uploading!!!
I brought home pizzas from Little Caesars. So my sons started talking about how Little Caesars supposedly makes up their sauce in 5-gallon buckets. And I told them that reminded me of this scene. I looked it up and sent the link. But I wasn't sure if I would be able to find it either. I just searched "MASH french toast" and there it was.
@@thomasferrusi1345 This scene was part of a subplot from S9 E20 in the series and it was called "The Life You Save." Incidentally Val Bisoglio, the actor who played the cook (Sgt Sal Pernelli) in that episode, recently passed away and one of the first things that sprang to mind when I read the article about his passing was this scene, more specifically his voice and him talking about "pinch it" and "moisture." Edit: And now I'm not sure whether to laugh or cry when I watch this scene. Somehow neither really feels appropriate right now.
Meal preparation for that chef was not too different from the surgery that Hawkeye had to do, you do the best you can with what you got. What would be the food equivalent of the "Meatball Surgery" be ? Cardboard Culinary ?
It was a sad day when I saw that obituary in my news feed. He made this scene. And it was the first thing that came to mind when I was reading about his career exploits.
@@LBF522 you would be very surprised what Army Mess Sgts can do. My father wasn't a cook but military intelligence used to tell me some of the funnies funniest stories about them. Some were horrible and some could work magic with a couple of c rations and a box of saltines. Just depends on who they were. My experience in the Marine Corps was different, but hey difference is there between 1969 and twenty years later in 1989.