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Is Food Outsourcing the Answer?
Many believe that food outsourcing (or purchasing
prepared entrees, starches, desserts etc. from reputable food
manufacturers) can generate considerable savings. This is true
up to a point.
My experience with "kitchenless" or
outsourced food projects indicates that operators, who adopt food
outsourcing to augment their department reengineering initiatives,
have realized up to 6% budget reductions while also enhancing
food quality. Moreover, the ability to avoid the capital investment
required to replace outdated production equipment is often a precursor
to adopting food outsourcing.
However, Burlodge has learned from the projects
it has implemented that it is the introduction of cold-meal-assembly
principles, and the departure from hot-belt lines and insulated
trays that offer the most sustainable savings (up to 12-16%).
This is because cold-meal assembly allows a team to prepare meal
trays in advance using one shift of employees around a belt line
rather than the shift-and-a-half required for a hot-belt line.
The chilled meals are then reheated (rethermalized) later in the
day, close to service, in specialized state-of-the art meal carts.
This raises the question, "What should come
first - food outsourcing or new tray assembly and delivery systems?"
The answer is that each can exist separately,
however, coupling these approaches leads to improved flexibility,
and considerable savings (some clients are realizing up to 18-22%
in savings and in some cases higher). Moreover, by combining these
solutions, there is an increase in menu item consistency and more
control of food cost. Less money is spent on repairs and maintenance
of kitchen equipment. The appearance of food trays improves and
food temperature is more consistent. Finally, there is more flexibility
in meal service times.
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