Sure. When I was like 11, I went to 4-H camp on Kelley's Island. The best thing was you could drink all the cold milk you wanted. I'm sure the cooks thought it odd that a kid would spend so much time JUST DRINKING MILK. All the others were finished and gone while I sat there with cold milk. You see, I was raised on 'powdered milk 'that you mixed water with. Not very tasty. We were so poor in those days.
Mess hall at summer and winter camp. Camp Massaweepie and Camp Cutler .... BS Troop 182 of the Otetiana Council
This post was edited by Benedict Arnold at July 30, 2019 7:02 AM MDT
I've eaten in dining halls, Great Halls, banquet room, lunchrooms, refectories, but never a chow hall. We called the place for taking meals the dining hall at all of the camps my kids and I went to during our childhoods and that is quite a list.
This post was edited by Thriftymaid at July 30, 2019 7:02 AM MDT
I'm not sure what a chow hall is. Maybe one of those places in Chinatown where tables are surrounded by umpteen stalls specialising in different Chinese cuisines? If so, I've eaten in outdoor versions in Kuala Lumpur and Malacca, and a modern indoor version in Sydney.
LOL. I am going to chime in because I am awake and no one else is here to answer. I think a chow hall is like a "mess hall" which is patterned after an army term. Where everyone eats together in a large assembly-type atmosphere.
Ah. In that case, I've eaten in a boarding school hall, in hospital cafeterias, in shopping mall food halls, large hotel dining rooms, at weddings in pavilions. But I've never eaten army food - nor been near army culture.
If it doesn't need walls, I've eaten at several communal campsites - one of them, countless times.
I have partaken of food and alcohol in a German style beer hall during Oktoberfest celebrations. I sang and stood on a table. It was loud and crazy and fun. I didn't wear Lederhosen but I certainly should have. I would've looked so cute.