Newark, NJ — As activists and some detainees continue raising concerns about food quality and nutrition at the Delaney Hall immigration detention facility, a weekly meal schedule circulating online paints a different picture: three daily meals featuring chicken, beef, turkey, eggs, vegetables, beans, salads, fruit, milk, bread, desserts, and multiple hot entrees throughout the week.
The menu compares equally, if not better than traditional New Jersey school lunch menus, minus the Friday pizza, except most school children in New Jersey actually have to pay for their own meals.
The menu surfaced amid ongoing protests outside the Newark detention center, where critics have accused facility operators of failing to provide adequate nourishment. While the menu itself does not verify portion sizes, food quality, or whether every meal was served exactly as listed, it offers a detailed look at what detainees are scheduled to receive.
Monday’s lineup alone includes scrambled eggs, potatoes, tortillas and milk for breakfast; a chicken leg quarter with mashed potatoes, vegetables and fruit cobbler for lunch; and fideo with meat sauce, green beans, salad, garlic bread and fruit for dinner.

By Wednesday, detainees are scheduled to receive farina, breakfast meat, hash browns and fruit in the morning, followed by a beef and bean burrito lunch and a chicken dinner with potatoes, beans and tortillas.
More Than Just Sandwiches
The seven-day menu includes a rotating selection of:
- Chicken fajitas
- Turkey stir-fry
- Beef and bean burritos
- Taco meat
- Chicken patties
- Tuna salad
- Salisbury steak
- Chicken salad
- Multiple vegetable options
- Fresh fruit
- Salads
- Milk
- Coffee
- Desserts including brownies, cobblers and cake
The menu also shows frequent servings of beans, rice, potatoes, cornbread, rolls, tortillas and other side dishes.
Supporters of the facility argue the document undermines claims that detainees are routinely denied adequate food.
Critics counter that a menu only reflects what is planned, not necessarily what reaches detainees’ trays or whether portions meet nutritional needs.
The School Lunch Comparison
The menu has also sparked comparisons on social media, where some users jokingly noted that Delaney Hall’s offerings appear more extensive than the lunches many students receive in public schools.

A typical school lunch often consists of a single entree, a vegetable, fruit and milk. By contrast, Delaney Hall’s published schedule includes three meals daily with multiple protein options, side dishes and desserts.
Some online commenters sarcastically observed that detainees appear scheduled to receive meals featuring chicken leg quarters, burritos, fajitas and cobbler while generations of students have spent years trying to identify the contents of what became known in cafeteria lore as “mystery meat.”
Claims and Counterclaims Continue
The debate over food has become part of a larger dispute surrounding Delaney Hall, which has emerged as a focal point in national immigration debates.
Recent protests outside the facility have led to arrests and confrontations with law enforcement. At the same time, detainees and advocacy groups have raised concerns ranging from food quality to medical care and detention conditions.
The menu itself does not resolve those allegations.
Food-service experts note that a published menu can demonstrate intended meal planning but does not independently confirm food quality, preparation standards, substitutions, portion sizes, or whether meals were served as listed on any given day.
A Political Flashpoint
Delaney Hall has become one of the most closely watched immigration detention facilities in the country as activists, elected officials, federal agencies and facility operators battle over competing narratives.
For critics, the menu does little to address broader concerns about detention conditions.
For supporters, the document raises questions about whether public claims regarding inadequate nourishment accurately reflect what detainees are being provided.