A Trump administration official pulled back the curtain on President Donald Trump’s in-flight dining on July 7, and the results were — let’s say — memorable. Monica Crowley, a former Fox News contributor who now serves as the president’s chief of protocol, posted a photo on X showing off what she described as a “Patriotic Freedom 250 meal aboard AF1.” Her tray displayed a mini hamburger, a notably undersized frankfurter, and two sweet treats decorated with American flag motifs. Patriotic? Perhaps. Impressive? That’s where things get complicated.
Kennedy’s ‘Poison’ Comment Looms Large
The ongoing parade of Air Force One food photos lands with extra weight given the administration’s own internal debate about the president’s diet. In a January podcast appearance, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he was baffled that Trump remained healthy given his poor eating habits, which Kennedy called poisonous. Kennedy noted that Trump’s diet improves when he’s at the White House or his Mar-a-Lago resort but deteriorates during travel.
The irony ran deep just days after those comments, when Trump and his Air Force One traveling party marked the rollout of Kennedy’s own Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) healthy eating guidelines by sitting down to a cheeseburger topped with a fried egg and bacon. It was a reaction that needed no caption — though it certainly got one. In 2024, Kennedy appeared in a photograph on Trump’s private plane holding a McDonald’s Big Mac, surrounded by Trump’s closest advisers. The image, shared by Donald Trump Jr., included the message “Make America Healthy Again starts TOMORROW,” a line that has aged in ways few could have anticipated.
A Pattern of Peculiar In-Flight Meals
Crowley’s post is only the latest in a string of Air Force One meal reveals that have left the public with more questions than answers. In May, during Trump’s trip for a meeting with President Xi Jinping of China, aide Margo Martin posted pictures of the airplane food. It looked promising on paper — beef stir fry, spring rolls, and a fortune cookie. The reality, however, was a rather forlorn-looking stir fry served on gold-rimmed plates alongside just two spring rolls. The gold-rimmed dishware may have been the most impressive part of the presentation.
Then came the Fourth of July. Trump celebrated aboard Air Force One by treating family members to custom cookies depicting his own likeness carved into Mount Rushmore alongside the four presidents already featured there. The photograph, posted by Bettina Trump on Instagram, showed the cookies cementing their place in the annals of presidential confectionery.
The Jet Itself Has Drawn Its Own Scrutiny
The meals generating buzz online are being served aboard an aircraft that has itself been no stranger to controversy. On June 19, Trump unveiled a new, temporary Air Force One — designated the VC-25B Bridge — at a hangar at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. The aircraft, painted in red, white, dark blue, and gold, was gifted to Trump by the Gulf emirate of Qatar. The arrangement raised significant political objections, given that the jet’s estimated $400 million value vastly exceeds the $50 limit on unsolicited gifts from a single source in a calendar year. Trump said rejecting the aircraft would be foolish.
Converting the Qatari Boeing 747 for presidential use is expected to cost roughly $1 billion. The jet is intended to serve as a bridge aircraft until two long-delayed purpose-built presidential Boeings are expected to be delivered in 2028 — planes whose costs have ballooned from $3.9 billion to $5.3 billion. Critics also raised concerns that conversion expenses could pull funding away from the Sentinel intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) modernization program, which is already running behind schedule.
The urgency behind acquiring the Qatari jet stems in part from the aging condition of the existing presidential fleet. The two Boeing 747s currently in service entered the fleet in 1990 during the presidency of George H.W. Bush. Earlier this year, one of those jets was forced to turn back to Washington during a trip to Davos, Switzerland, after the crew identified a minor electrical problem.
Sliders, Small Hot Dogs, and Symbolic Snacks
Against that backdrop of billion-dollar jets and diplomatic gift controversies, Crowley’s cheerful snapshot of flag-themed candy and a petite hot dog feels almost charmingly low-key. Whether the “Patriotic Freedom 250 meal” represents a deliberate aesthetic choice, a nod to Trump’s well-documented preference for simple American food, or simply the best the galley had to offer at 30,000 feet is unclear. What is clear is that Air Force One’s catering team has developed an unexpected talent for generating headlines — one slider, one sad stir fry, and one Mount Rushmore cookie at a time.










