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An Overview of Food Preparation

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An Overview of Food Preparation What everyone in hospitality should know about the business of food and how professional kitchens work * * * * * * * Cooking Areas ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: An Overview of Food Preparation


1
An Overview of Food Preparation
  • What everyone in hospitality should know about
    the business of food and how professional
    kitchens work

2
Situations where kitchens are located
  • There is a huge diversity of establishments
    within the hospitality industry
  • Whilst many sell and serve food the target
    market and style of food sold differs

3
Establishments involved in food production
  • Restaurants
  • Cafes
  • Taverns
  • Hotels
  • Motels
  • Schools
  • Roadhouses
  • Hospitals
  • Prisons
  • Clubs
  • casinos
  • Bistros
  • Cafeterias
  • Industrial canteens
  • Transport (air, rail, sea)
  • Colleges and universities
  • Fast food outlets
  • The armed services
  • Function/convention centres
  • Emergency and relief catering
  • Outside or event catering
  • Community services

4
Food production kitchens vary in size, output,
staffing levels, hours of operation, levels of
staff experience, available equipment and
capacity of equipment.
  • Lets look closely at some examples

5
Fine dining restaurants
  • A fine dining restaurant can be defined as having
    an international or classic menu
  • A classic menu is one that has a certain sense of
    style and presentation.
  • The kitchen brigade in fine dining restaurants
    operate on the traditional old European model.

6
Fine dining restaurants contd
  • This style of restaurant may be located as part
    of an international hotel or may stand alone. It
    should be noted that such restaurants , because
    of high operating costs , present a considerable
    economic risk.
  • A restaurant operating as part of an
    international hotel or resort is likely to be
    subsidised by the overall food and beverage
    operation, because the establishment may consider
    the restaurant to be prestigious to its target
    market.

7
Fine Dining Restaurants contd
  • The pace of service is leisurely with usually
    only one sitting within the designated dining
    period.
  • A customer dining in this style of restaurant can
    enjoy a sophisticated atmosphere and be served by
    experienced, highly skilled staff.
  • This type of food service usually commands the
    highest prices for food and service in order to
    cover costs of quality ingredients and very
    experienced staff in both the kitchen and dining
    room areas.

8
Layout of a fine dining kitchen
  • The physical kitchen layout is usually well
    planned with separate areas for members of the
    brigade who have preparation and cookery
    responsibility for certain dishes and/or areas of
    the establishments menu.
  • Food may be plated up all items on the plate and
    then served to the guest or
  • Served on a gueridon trolley each item meal on a
    separate tray on the trolley and the waiter
    silver serves ( using a fork and spoon) the food
    onto the guests plate.

9
Typical Commercial Kitchen
10
Open Kitchen
11
Mise en place A French term referring to having
all the ingredients necessary for a dish
prepared and ready to combine up to the point of
cooking.
12
Chefs preparation bench
13
Hotel Kitchen
14
A la Carte / Bistro restaurant
  • A la carte restaurants are usually less formal
    than fine dining restaurants ( yet may still be
    stylish)
  • They make up the largest category of restaurants.
  • Most are moderately priced (but some are fairly
    expensive) and offer a menu that is extensive,
    varied and interesting, often incorporating
    different cooking styles and nationalities. Some
    a la carte restaurants focus wholly on a cultural
    theme and specialise in one cuisine.

15
A la carte restaurants contd
  • The kitchen staff vary in skill level and
    organisational structure depending on the
    particular establishment.
  • Generally there is multi-skilling between staff
    members to a greater degree than a formal
    restaurant, with kitchen staff performing many
    more varied tasks and often providing meals for
    more than one sitting.

16
A la carte restaurant contd
  • The food production team is usually smaller than
    that within the kitchen of a fine dining
    restaurant.
  • The layout is usually simpler and similarly there
    is usually less equipment.
  • The organisation is less formal and structured
    and some food items may be purchased in a
    prepared state as the establishments labour
    force is limited.

17
The travel industry
  • Food production is a major part of the travel
    industry
  • Airline food production takes place in
    well-equipped and very clean kitchens near
    airport facilities
  • Airline food preparation is characterised by the
    use of high technology techniques using either
    cook-chill or cook-freeze

18
Travel Industry contd
  • These systems maintain plated foods for set
    periods of time at a hygienically safe level.
  • Staff preparing foods would include a range of
    kitchen hands and process workers along with
    dieticians and highly qualified chefs.
  • The chefs fulfill a dual role of providing
    limited special dietary/ethnic/religious dishes
    and first class meals and secondly having
    managerial responsibilities such as food
    purchasing and staff rostering.

19
Railway Food
  • Railway food may be pre-cooked similarly to
    airline food or cooked whilst in transit by
    trained cooks and chefs in a specially prepared
    kitchen called a galley.
  • Most country area trains have pre-prepared simple
    meals that just need to be reheated by an
    attendant who doubles as a bar attendant and a
    food attendant.

20
Railway kitchens
  • Interstate and long distance rail travel provides
    a more sophisticated food production unit with
    trained cooks and chefs preparing foods in the
    galley while the train is in motion.
  • Some long distance European and Asian trains
    provide different menus for first class, tourist
    class and economy passengers.

21
Hospitals and prisons
  • Hospitals and prisons are another sector of the
    food production operations that have a captive
    audience
  • In prisons the customer or guest has very
    little offered in the way of service and relies
    upon the financial and welfare policies of each
    state and territories.

22
Prison and Hospital Kitchens
  • Food production staff vary from the very
    experienced head chef (often termed the food
    service manager as this person must not only have
    food knowledge but be able to control a tight
    food and labour budget ) to food production staff
    such as trained and qualified chefs.
  • Most welfare establishments operate on a cyclical
    menu- that is , a set menu operating for
    breakfast , lunch and dinner and repeated every
    28 days.

23
Outside Catering
  • Outside or event catering requires food
    production to be managed in a different location
    to the main or central kitchen.
  • Food production is usually for a specific event
    such as a wedding in a marquee or for a special
    event such as a carnival, race meeting or street
    festival, where food may also be provided in a
    marquee.

24
Outside Catering contd
  • Forms of outside catering include spit roasting,
    barbeques, picnics and formal sit-down meals.
  • Food production staff need to be very well
    organised in order to orchestrate these functions
    as all food and equipment must be taken to the
    venue to be set up.

25
Outside catering contd
  • The food production staff need to set up a
    temporary on-site kitchen and hire portable large
    kitchen equipment.
  • This style of catering demands that staff also
    fully understand the on-site legalities, such as
    local health regulations, car parking
    restrictions, garbage disposal and utility
    functions such as gas/electiricity supply.

26
Outside catering contd
  • These functions and events require great detail
    in planning as with shipping, running out of
    food or equipment has no solution.
  • Staff have to be versatile such areas of
    catering require people who are not only
    multi-skilled in kitchen operations but are also
    able to perform duties such as setting up
    portable kitchen equipment or organising front of
    house staff.

27
So lets take a closer look at the types of
kitchens and how they are organised.
28
The Kitchen
  • When you first walk into a commercial kitchen ,
    everything will seem a little strange!!
  • The equipment and work areas are on a larger
    scale to what you may be used to in a domestic
    kitchen.
  • The food is prepared and cooked in specific areas
    of the kitchen
  • Once you have worked in a commercial kitchen you
    will understand why equipment and benches are
    placed the way they are.

29
Kitchen layout
  • The layout of a commercial kitchen must be
    planned around an efficient and systematic flow
    of foods from receipt of goods to the service of
    meals
  • Details concerning water, fuel, drainage,
    lighting and ventilation are also important to
    any well-designed kitchen .

30
  • When a kitchen is built , it is designed to
    achieve maximum efficiency of time, labour and
    product.
  • To achieve this a number of factors are taken
    into account
  • The type of menu
  • The type of establishment
  • The type and method of food service
  • The number of meals to be served and the length
    of service
  • The size, shape and location of the food service
    and the position of the kitchen in the
    establishment.

31
Food Flow
  • The usual flow of food through an establishment
    is
  • Goods enter the store, where they are checked
  • They are stored in dry or cool storage or the
    freezer
  • Goods are passed onto different areas for
    preparation
  • The food is cooked
  • The food is either held or served straight away.

32
Receipt of goods
  • Checking and weighing foods
  • Dry store freezer or cold store
  • Vegetables Meat Poultry Dairy Fruits
  • Fruits Fish Vegetables
  • Groceries
  • Preparation
  • Cooking
  • Service

33
Food preparation areas
  • Equipment is usually positioned in those
    preparation or cooking areas where it is used
    frequently.
  • In wet preparation areas for fruit and
    vegetables (usually located near the vegetable
    store) , equipment includes sinks, stainless
    steel benches, food mincer, potato drum peeler,
    chipper, slicer and shredder.

34
Cooking Areas
  • Equipment in these areas is usually grouped into
    island sites with benches between or on each
    side.
  • Equipment which cooks with water , such as
    atmospheric or pressure steamers, tilt pans and
    stockpots, is grouped together near floor drains,
    while equipment for short order cooking, like
    grills and frypans are positioned near
    ventilation to remove heat and fumes.

35
Service Areas
  • Equipment used to hold food hot or cold for
    service, such as a bain-marie, hot press or
    refrigerator is positioned near the dining room
    entrance. Beverage and toast making facilities
    are located near the service section for quick
    and easy access by waiters.
  • Refer to handout with diagrams of food flow
    patterns

36
Cleaning and washing areas
  • Pots and pans are washed in separate areas or in
    areas near their use, depending on the size of
    the kitchen. Dishes and glasses are washed in an
    area close to the serving section. Equipment
    located in this area includes the dishwasher,
    large sinks, stainless steel benches, food
    disposal unit, rubbish bins and cleaning
    equipment.
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