Jennifer Brignac and her husband Johnny Cook own Jo's Cafe, a food truck designed to travel to disaster sites and feed first responders and victims. Based in Tupelo, Mississippi, the couple drove around 350km to Dawson Springs, Kentucky, to give a traditional holiday meal to victims of the recent tornadoes, as seen on Saturday.
"We've had our food truck for four years and the mission behind is to feed first responders and victims in such incidences such as just happened in Kentucky and several states actually," said Jennifer Brignac. "We are feeding about 320 today," she added.
Brignac and Cook also collected Christmas cards, with notes, gift cards or cash for the people affected by the tornadoes.
"We are just blessed to use the resources that God has given us," commented Brignac.
Deadly tornadoes hit central and southern US two weeks ago, killing dozens of people and leaving a trail of destruction from Arkansas to Kentucky.
Jennifer Brignac and her husband Johnny Cook own Jo's Cafe, a food truck designed to travel to disaster sites and feed first responders and victims. Based in Tupelo, Mississippi, the couple drove around 350km to Dawson Springs, Kentucky, to give a traditional holiday meal to victims of the recent tornadoes, as seen on Saturday.
"We've had our food truck for four years and the mission behind is to feed first responders and victims in such incidences such as just happened in Kentucky and several states actually," said Jennifer Brignac. "We are feeding about 320 today," she added.
Brignac and Cook also collected Christmas cards, with notes, gift cards or cash for the people affected by the tornadoes.
"We are just blessed to use the resources that God has given us," commented Brignac.
Deadly tornadoes hit central and southern US two weeks ago, killing dozens of people and leaving a trail of destruction from Arkansas to Kentucky.
Jennifer Brignac and her husband Johnny Cook own Jo's Cafe, a food truck designed to travel to disaster sites and feed first responders and victims. Based in Tupelo, Mississippi, the couple drove around 350km to Dawson Springs, Kentucky, to give a traditional holiday meal to victims of the recent tornadoes, as seen on Saturday.
"We've had our food truck for four years and the mission behind is to feed first responders and victims in such incidences such as just happened in Kentucky and several states actually," said Jennifer Brignac. "We are feeding about 320 today," she added.
Brignac and Cook also collected Christmas cards, with notes, gift cards or cash for the people affected by the tornadoes.
"We are just blessed to use the resources that God has given us," commented Brignac.
Deadly tornadoes hit central and southern US two weeks ago, killing dozens of people and leaving a trail of destruction from Arkansas to Kentucky.