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Controlling Food Cost in Production

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Controlling Food Cost in Production 7 Controlling Foodservice Costs OH 7-* Chapter Learning Objectives Develop a food production chart. Describe how a waste report ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Controlling Food Cost in Production


1
Controlling Food Cost in Production
7
  • Controlling Foodservice Costs

OH 7-1
2
Chapter Learning Objectives
  • Develop a food production chart.
  • Describe how a waste report helps control food
    costs.
  • Use a conversion factor to calculate a new yield
    for an existing recipe.
  • Determine a recipes yield and the number of
    portions it will produce.

3
Monitoring Standards
  • Tasting foods regularly is one way to ensure
    standards are met. The use of standardized
    recipes is another.

4
Food That Does Not Meet the Restaurants
Standards
  • Should not be served
  • Should be salvaged (all or part), if possible
  • Should be discarded if not salvageable
  • Increase costs
  • Reduce profits

5
Questions to Ask When Food Fails to Meet
Standards
  • Is the recipe clearly written?
  • Did the cook understand the recipe?

6
Questions to Ask When Food Fails to Meet
Standards continued
  • Are ingredients used in the recipe clearly
    labeled?
  • Are the appropriate ingredients in the proper
    containers? (Do ingredients in containers match
    the containers labels?)

OH 7-6
7
Determining Quantity to Produce
  • Accurate food production schedules are important
    because
  • Overproduction causes excessive leftovers and
    waste.
  • Underproduction causes production shortages and
    unhappy customers.
  • Both situations reduce profits!

8
Determining Quantity to Produce continued
  • To maximize guest satisfaction, managers help
    their production staff know how much to prepare
    on the proper day and at the proper time.

9
To Ensure Proper Production
  • Professional managers always use food production
    charts!

10
Sample Production Chart
11
Food Production Charts
  • Created by studying past sales (sales histories)
  • Generally, the best predictor of what guests will
    buy in the future is what they purchased in the
    past.
  • Created based upon managements estimate of
    future sales

12
When Using Production Charts
  • Prepare an estimate of the number of guests to be
    served.
  • Indicate the actual number of items to be
    produced.
  • Post the production chart where it can be seen
    easily.

13
When Using Production Charts continued
  • Ensure the required standardized recipes are
    readily available.
  • Periodically check the actual recipe yield
    against that listed on the standardized recipe.

14
Waste Reports
  • Critical to food cost control
  • Easily completed
  • Should be maintained for each shift
  • May indicate
  • Where training is needed
  • Production concerns that require attention

15
Sample Waste Report
16
Analysis of Waste Reports
  • Determine why each item had to be discarded.
  • Develop a strategy to prevent similar future
    losses.
  • Share findings with those who need to know.

17
Recipe Conversions
  • Step 1 Compute the conversion factor.

Desired yield Current recipe yield Conversion factor
18
Recipe Conversions continued
  • Step 1 Example
  • Current yield, fifty portions
  • Desired yield, forty portions

Desired yield Current recipe yield Conversion factor
40 50 40 50 40 50 0.80
19
Recipe Conversions continued
  • Step 2 Convert ingredients into units that can
    be easily multiplied or divided.
  • Convert weights to ounces.
  • Convert cups, pints, and quarts to fluid ounces.

20
Recipe Conversions continued
  • Step 3 Multiply each ingredient by the
    conversion factor.
  • Example

96 oz x 0.80 76.8 oz
21
Recipe Conversions continued
  • Step 4 Convert ingredient amounts back to
    normally used units.
  • Example

76.8 oz 8 oz 9.6 c or 2 qt, 1½ c
22
Recipe Yields
  • Recipe yields must be known.
  • Accurate costing of menu items is not possible
    without known and consistent yields from
    standardized recipes.
  • Effective production planning is also impossible
    without known recipe yields.

23
Recipe Yields continued
  • To calculate a recipe yield, compute the total
    volume of the recipe by
  • Weightfor those recipes where portion size is
    determined by weight.
  • Volumefor those recipes where portion size is
    determined by volume.

24
Calculating Recipe Yield
  • Weigh or measure only the major ingredients.
  • Account for cooking loss, especially for
  • Meats
  • Vegetables
  • Fruit

25
How Would You Answer the Following Questions?
  • It (is/is not) possible for a cook using a
    standardized recipe to create a substandard menu
    item.
  • Waste reports indicate when employees overportion
    and waste food. (True/False)
  • How many steps does the recipe conversion process
    have?
  • Three
  • Four
  • Five
  • Six
  • A recipe (yield/portion conversion) test is a
    calculation of the number of portions produced by
    a standardized recipe.

26
Key Term Review
  • Conversion factor
  • Food production chart
  • Recipe conversion
  • Recipe yield
  • Taste test
  • Waste report

27
Chapter Learning Objectives What Did You Learn?
  • Develop a food production chart.
  • Describe how a waste report helps control food
    costs.
  • Use a conversion factor to calculate a new yield
    for an existing recipe.
  • Determine a recipes yield and the number of
    portions it will produce.
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