The daily rations at Auschwitz consisted of black coffee in the morning, soup at noon, and bread and margarine after the roll call at 6 in the afternoon. Wiesel first mentions it as "bread with something" and is more specific later.
The fact that the food is of poor quality, as well as being small and unvaried, is obvious from the fact that Elie refuses his initial portion of soup (a "thick" soup) but "eagerly" eats any kind of soup by the third day. Though the information about the food is unsurprising, these facts alone are the clearest indication of the genocidal intent of the Nazis. Even for the prisoners who were not sent to the gas chamber, the intended result of being given scanty, poor rations while being forced to do difficult physical labor was death by starvation and overwork. The gas chambers and crematoria were merely a quicker...
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way of doing what the Nazis had intended from the start through any means available: the mass murder of the Jewish population of Europe.
The rations at each meal consisted on coffee (in the mornings), and thick soup. Every now and again there is a mention of rough bread, some of which is smuggled in by a relative they found in the camp. This is the chapter which mostly deals with all the negatives in the camp. It is very consistent in tone and form in that Wiesel just keeps going and telling his story with not much introspection, but more fact.
Chapter 3 narrates the horrific events that occur when Elie and his father arrive at Auschwitz and begin to learn the true reality of what is happening to them and how they are to be treated. Certainly the shock of how they are degraded and treated like animals is matched by the joy of survival as they realise that they are alive, at least for the present. As the description of their activities continues, Elie answers your question for you in a way that highlights the menotony of their routine:
Days went by. In the mornings: black coffee. At midday; soup. By the third day, I was eagerly eating any kind of soup... At six o'clock in the afternoon: roll call. Followed by bread with something. At nine o'clock: bedtime.
Note how the brief nature of the sentences reinforces the sense of how this routine came to dominate Elie and the prisoners' lives - this short routine becomes their entire life as their life's purpose shrinks to the importance of getting through each day and surviving.