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Institutional food inside correctional facilities is designed to meet minimum nutritional requirements at the lowest possible cost. For most inmates the quality, variety, and quantity fall well short of what they were accustomed to on the outside. Understanding how to supplement institutional meals through commissary, how to request dietary accommodations for medical or religious reasons, and how to make the best of the food environment inside are practical survival skills. This section covers what inmates can expect from the institutional food program, what commissary food options are typically available and which ones are worth buying, how tuna and mackerel packages became the informal currency of correctional facilities, how to request a special diet, and what families can send from outside to supplement their loved one's nutrition. The guidance here is honest and practical coming from people who ate institutional food for years and figured out how to make it work. See also our sections on Commissary and Inmate Care Packages

Subject: Prison food
The county jail food is considered the worst of the three. Their budgets are smaller, the inmates are not typically there for long periods of time and that translates into a more narrow selection of menu options. State and federal inmate meals are overseen by a registered nutritionist and meets dietary standards but might not meed flavor standards. Federal has a national menu that is available for anyone to see - it is by far the best of the three....
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Subject: Prison food
Yes they do, all of the facilities nationwide offer what inmates call the "best meal of the year". The second best meal is for Christmas.
Subject: Prison food
Yes they do. However it is not an elaborate meal with outlandish requests. Some requests that are granted are steak, cheeseburgers, ice cream or pizza. But they will not bring lobster or anything like that.
Subject: Prison food
The facilities do not service, but inmates with money on their books may buy instant coffee from the commissary
Subject: Prison food
Yes, all facilities offer Ramadan meals, kosher meals, no-pork diets or any religious accommodation.
Subject: Prison food
Inmates that are in disciplinary hold, also called the Special Housing Unit (SHU), or the hole, or the "box" are given three square meals. In fact, they are given hefty portions to keep them calm. Food is the least of their worries while isolated there. Inmates in this situation are usually restricted from buying too many items from the commissary making it near impossible to feed themselves.
Subject: Prison food
The prison food is generally bland. Menus are usually designed by a nutrition for a balanced diet of calories, proteins, carbohydrates and fats.  The taste is not great as they don't have much extra to season the food so you get some mediocre meals. But be certain that the inmates are getting at least 2500 calories per day. You can always put money on their commissary to buy the little extras like bags of tuna, chicken, and mackerel; to go...
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Subject: Prison food
Standard meal times in most correctional facilities follow a fairly predictable schedule built around institutional operations rather than anything resembling a normal dining experience on the outside. Breakfast typically comes early, usually around 5:30 to 6:30 in the morning. Facilities run on early schedules and the kitchen staff, often made up of inmate workers, starts well before most people would consider a reasonable hour. Lunch generally falls around 11:00 to 11:30 in the morning and dinner is served in the mid...
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Subject: Prison food
Yes, inmates are legally entitled to three meals a day and every facility operating within the law is required to provide them. That is the standard across federal prisons, state facilities, and county jails. It is not a privilege, it is a constitutional baseline rooted in the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. What those three meals actually look like is a different conversation entirely. Prison food is functional, not enjoyable. Meals are designed to meet minimum caloric and nutritional...
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Subject: Prison food
Usually the meal times are 6am-7:30am for breakfast; 11:00am-12:30 for lunch and 4:30 - 6:00 for dinner
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