Occasional Quantity Cooks

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If quantity cooking was as simple as multiplication life would be easier all around. However, as anyone put in the place of converting a recipe for two into something that will feed the whole family reunion or a cafeteria of hungry kids will know -- life is not that simple.

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Holiday/ Turkey Meal Help

Community Feasts; an Introduction
Shopping list and quantities for large turkey dinners- 30 or 300
Turkey and Chicken: Yield Tables
How to carve a roast turkey at the table
How to cut up many raw turkeys for faster roasting: plus TEMP and ROASTING TIPS
Ellen's Better Green Bean Casserole for 60
25,000 for dinner; Raul Jimenez Thanksgiving
OAMC Freezable Turkey and Stuffing Casserole
Lowering the Fats and Carbs in Your Thanksgiving Feast
The Gravy Pages: Gallons of Gravy
Safely Storing and Reheating Turkey and Gravy OR Ham
Traditional Frozen Fruit Salad and other Fruit Salads
and don't miss Ellen's Kitchen Freezable Holdable Mashed Potatoes, and Crockpot Cranberry Conserve.
Corn Side Dishes for 10, 50, or 100. Souffle, green chili, succotash, fried corn
Fresh Country Green Beans for 50 or 100.
Holiday Vegetables for 100; Green Bean variations, peas, cauliflower, pearl onions, brussel sprouts, spinach and more! Cream sauces and serving/ reheating tips.

Reducing the quantity of ingredients is not the only step. You will probably need to cut back the cooking time and possibly the size of your equipment — a saucy curry for four originally.

new for 2012Yam Casseroles- Ruth Chris-style pecan traditional and spicy Yummy Yams.

Prime Rib and Beef Roasting Tips and Cooking Tables
Cranberry Choices

How to Estimate and Set up Buffet Tables

Ellen's Tested Quantity Recipes
Cold Champagne/ Wine buffet reception for 25 A buying guide.
Chai spice tea Make your own quart of chai concentrate at a fraction of the cost of store-bought. Caffeine-free variation, too.
Kung Fu Vegetarian Vegetable Soup
Jamilla's Gazpacho An icy summer garden soup.
Herb Teas Six different herb blends for aches, pains, and just plain tasty drinking.
Great Crockpot Chutney Summer or winter, with abundant harvest or canned fruits, you can make a terrific condiment for your curry or roast.
Crockpot Cranberry Relish If it's poultry or tofu roast you are preparing, try this autumn favorite.
Sweet Brown Pickle (Branston Pickle) A crunchy, spicy vegetable pickle dresses up a plain sandwich or any cheese plate.
Biscotti Baking Binge and a Collection of Biscotti-internet recipes and history
Meatballs, pasta and trimmings for 25 people. Add your own favorite sauce recipe. Whether you go Italian or Swedish, everybody can enjoy this easy meal.
Easy souffle for 25 people The original used canned soup, so is not for the meticulous. This adaptation is easy and untemperamental, using up lots of chopped cooked vegetables. It is a great hit with the diners.
Baked macaroni and cheese for many with a quick and simple cheese sauce.
Classic Baked Mac and CheeseThe rich golden, crunchy-topped dish of our dreams and memories.
Fast baked apples have traditional flavor, but are practical for a group.
Rice or tapioca custard pudding Nourishing dessert, good for breakfast, too.
Ellen's Really good bread pudding
Zoe's Hummus: 60 servings
Rich Baked Oatmeal for 50 is an overnight recipe for a delicious, protein-fortified breakfast.
Freezer or Crockpot Lasagna beef, chicken or meatless variations, this recipe uses uncooked lasagna noodles.
Freezable, holdable Mashed Potatoes for 25 With this unique recipe, top a frozen shepards' pie, delight a Thanksgiving crowd, or serve with the upside down chickens below.
Roast Chicken Melee when chickens are on sale, roast six at a time! 24 servings, plus the BEST chicken soup.
24 Gardenburgers a clone recipe and a higher nutrition adaptation. These freeze very conveniently.
Baked Yellow Squash Casserole for 24 as served all over the South and in a famous Southern Diner. Freezes beautifully for (OAMC) once a month cooking.
Squash and Pasta Bake for 24 when you need a serious side dish or a good vegetarian main dish.
Freezing precooked meat bases allows for quick preparation of large meals. Lower cholesterol in ground beef dishes!
Cocoa and Rich Hot Chocolate Drinks for winter mornings and cookie feasts.
Buttermilk Angel Biscuits Easy, tender, versatile; biscuits, dumplings, flatbread and much more. Refrigerate until needed.
Freezable Crusts and Apple Filling for 10 pies new
Buttermilk Bran muffins new Make 4 dozen at once or refrigerate the batter up to 6 weeks; variations with REAL bran instead of expensive bran cereals- less sugar, more fruit!
Great Whole Grain Pancake Mix Homemade Deluxe Multigrain Buttermilk Batch Pancake and Waffle Mix Recipe.
Lowfat freezable crockpot refried beans
Big Beefy Tomato Soups and Variations
Make Ahead Entrees

Freeze in batches, use for family feasts or wedding dinners.

Wedding Chicken: Freezable Orange Dijon Chicken
Veal or Chicken Marsala with tomatoes and mushrooms for 100
Thrifty Entrees for 50-100

Great for free food events, these are tasty but inexpensive dishes- family or camp food, not wedding reception food.

Spaghetti Casserole, Enchiladas, Chili, Lasagna, Freezer Meatballs
Chicken and Sausage Jambalaya, Fried Beef Liver, Baked Swiss Steak
Chicken and Rice
Sloppy Joes and Loose Meat Sandwiches
Side dishes for 50-100- salads, rice, veggies
Veggies and Other Side Dishes for 100
Slaws, macaroni and potato salads 100 servings at a time
An assortment of 100 person rice dishes for sides or entrees.
Thrifty Rice Side Dishes
Beans For 100 Baked Beans, the Deacons' Lima Beans, Borracho Beans
Slaws, macaroni and lots of different potato salads 100 servings at a time
Cole Slaw Tips and More Quantity Recipes
Professional Recipes for 50-100

Here are some flavor-improved basic food service recipes which will help you learn to move back and forth between weights and the more traditional measures.

Baked French Toast Lots of breakfast, no frying; a basic recipe. Requires overnight refrigeration before baking.
topping recipe added Low Fat Oatmeal Muffin Squares One secret to quantity cooking is to translate a favorite recipe to an easier-to-prepare form. A recipe for six muffins is great baked in a 10' pie pan and cut into wedges. A recipe for 50 muffins can make two great pans of breakfast squares.
Occasional quantity cooks
Vegetable Lasagna Basic quantities: one noodle per person, and go on from there.
Turkey or Tofu Rotini with Cheese A simple, kid-pleasing comfort food with a vegetarian variation.
Broccoli or Carrot Salad
Peanut Butter Bars
Peanut Butter Glaze for the peanut butter bars!
Indian Pudding Cornmeal and molasses or honey, slowbaked into an exceptional dessert.
Spoonbread A light, tasty cornmeal souffle, perfect for a vegetable plate or Sunday dinner.
Southern Dressing or Stuffing Enriched with bell pepper, hard-cooked eggs and golden seasoning vegetables, this makes a satisfying and delectable dish. With a great gravy, it can be a fine main dish for a luncheon.
Southwestern Breakfast Bake A Southwestern flavor in a quiche-like filling with a crispy potato crust, for breakfast, brunch or lunch.
Quantity Cooking For Groups and Occasions- Links
Access through the Armed Forces Quartermaster service Recipe Search offers a search device for over 1300 standardized recipes for 100 people. There is also a list of all the recipe and guideline titles includes a complete introduction to quantity cooking equipment, recipes, and techniques. You must have the Adobe Acrobat Reader plug-in for your browser to use the recipes at the Armed Forces site.
Volumes for pans, cake pan sizes and many other how to's on pan measurements.
Food yields; pounds to cups and back.
Budgeting and Planning for Large Groups and Events
The BIG Question? Do you REALLY want to cook for 100-200-300? Thinking about Self-catering your wedding? Or running any really big food event? Read this first!
Quantities to serve 100: Entrees, salads, vegetables, sandwiches, starches and grains.
Salad Bars for 100; an article on planning and tables for various items.
Beverages and miscellaneous for 100
Individual Items Needed for 25 servings Remember '25 servings' feeds about 20 people!
A few notes on Budgeting costs and Estimating Weekly Food for Large Groups When it is a long term project and not a party, you need a different quantities and a different approach!
From the Plan to the Pan and on to the table. Cooking up your big party. In progress.
Sunny Side UP! Planning breakfast for 100
I love BRUNCH for 100- a complete plan. Cheesy potatoes, Amazing maple date strata and more.
Dessert planning tables and cake layer portion plans.
a LOT OF CHILI also cornbread, horse radish pickles, and chat.
Spaghetti, lotsa pasta
Large BBQ's, picnics, and brisket, with entree planning and grilling info and quantities for BBQ, Lazy-Q and even Pseudo-Q (oven-based, BBQ 'style').
TexMex Fiesta-Fiesta Taco Fiesta, Spanish Rice, Spinach Enchiladas, Creamy Bean Burritos and other popular items for 100 or more.
Fajitas for Four or a hundred Quantity guide, recipes, menus, cooking tips
Baked Potato Bar for 100- a worksheet for toppings and basic potato-baking directions. How to cook and hold.
Tips and guidelines for setting up self service Food Bars and buffets
Quantities for Appetizers, cheese and party trays for many
How to prepare large Vegetable trays and salads
Deviled Eggs, Hot Wings and other appetizers for large gatherings
Fruit platters and fruit salads for your party
Tea in the afternoon history of tea, with how to make tea for your party.
Tea sandwiches; all kinds
Picnics and Big Sandwich events planning guide, bulk recipes and quantity tables.
Chocolate Fountains Set up, clean up, cautions, and quantities.
Punches and Party Drinks A few of my creations.
Ice Cream Socials, Affogato and Sundae Bars A dessert reception is a lovely after-wedding event or party. Here's how.
More Recipes for 50-100
Salads that Hold Moroccan Couscous Salad, Next Day Many Layer Salad, Greek Salad for 100, new for 2009 Ellen's Kitchen Revamped Asian Noodle Salad
Baked Desserts and Plain Cakes Cheesy Apple Crisp, Yellow Cake from scratch with Brown sugar frosting, Date Bars or B'Nana Custard Bars, Rozky- Traditional Slovak Raisin Pastries
Quantity Cooking In The Home Kitchen
Equipping a Kitchen for Quantity/ Group Cooking
Hints for scaling or adapting family recipes for larger groups.
Cold storage of quantity cooking at home
Guide to freezing any vegetable from the University of Florida Extension. Links to other freezing and food safety information.
Once A Month Cooking (OAMC), Freezer Cooking or Megacooking
Ellen's Kitchen OAMC Recipe Index and links.
The OAMC Novice read this first, before you start OAMC.
Freezing Casseroles for OAMC with Pan Exchange Table What you need to know to freeze- and reheat- your own recipes successfully.
Freeze these potatoes! Heard you can't freeze potatoes? Try freezable Hashbrown Breakfast and other potato tricks.
An OAMC Plan for a 10 person soy vegetarian household new with shopping list, prep, and recipes.
Beef chunk and ground beef preps for OAMC cooking.
OAMC for Singles and Pairs new OAMC for singles and pairs improves nutrition, increases variety, reduces food costs for small households, too.
Coming in March, breakfast burritos, quiches, muffins and other choices. Your freezer is healthier and cheaper than any drive in window!
Freezable Burritos
Entree Exchange Club Freeze it, exchange it or throw a big party; once you learn quantity cooking you have a lot of options.
OAMC Techniques and Tips Some spices and flavoring don't freeze well. Look here for wrapping tips and other hints for OAMC.
Help translating cups to pounds for your shopping list
Quantity cooking and OAMC: two variations on the same theme. Once a month cooking notes and OAMC links- a work in progress

You may be a good cook but cooking for a crowd is different. This short presentation is designed for volunteers who help prepare, serve or handle food at any large group event. This may be a pancake breakfast, parish dinner, festival booth or maybe even your own family party.

There’s a lot to learn about how to plan, prepare and serve food in quantities. But, the most important is how to make sure the food is safe. It’s scary to think about people getting sick from your meal, but it can and does happen. Each year, millions of people suffer from foodborne illness. While foodborne illness can be as mild as a stomach ache, it can also be fatal.

Topics covered include:

  • Planning the quantity food event
  • Foodborne illness: how does bacteria grow?
  • Personal hygiene for safe food: handwashing
  • Cross contamination
  • Time and temperatures
  • Storing food supplies
  • Preparing quantity food
  • Keeping food safe when holding and serving
  • Handling the leftovers

Video transcript: Cooking Safely for a Crowd

Slide # 1

It's scary to think that people might get sick from the food you serve at a large group event, but it can and does happen! Each year over 76 million of us suffer from foodborne illnesses. While a foodborne illness can be as mild as a stomach ache, it can also be fatal, or it can cause longterm disabilities.

Slide # 2

I'm Lou Ann Jopp, Food Science Educator with the University of Minnesota Extension from the St. Cloud Regional Office. Welcome to the Cooking Safely For a Crowd presentation.

Slide # 3

The major goal of this presentation is to keep people from getting sick, with a foodborne illness, from food you serve them. It is designed to help anyone who plans prepares or serves food for a large group of people. It includes practices and ways to help keep food safe for those that eat at your events. This may be:

  • A family reunion or graduation party.
  • A church dinner a funeral lunch.
  • Or a community gathering, such as a dinner provided as a fundraiser.

Slide # 4

You may be a good cook, but cooking for a large group of people is different! For example – think about preparing and handling 1 turkey – purchasing and transporting 1 turkey is usually not a problem. Think about how you keep it cold where and how long it takes to thaw what you need for roasting equipment how you will be serving the turkey and how you cool the leftovers.

Now think about these same things when you are going to be serving 9 or more turkeys. It definitely is different and takes much more planning and coordination plus more workers.

Slide # 5

What is a foodborne illness? Often referred to as food poisoning. By definition it is an illness caused by consuming food or beverage that contained a contaminant. The general symptoms of a foodborne illness are vomiting, diarrhea, nausea, fever or chills—often mistakenly called the stomach flu.

A contaminant could be:

  • Chemical—for example the chlorine bleach you use in a sanitizing solution accidently gets spilled into your food.
  • It could be physical—which could be someone's hair. While none of us like finding someone's hair in our food that may not be as detrimental as glass from a broken light bulb that broke in your storage area and got into some food.

The major cause of foodborne illnesses is biological—which include viruses and bacteria. The harmful ones are called pathogens and that is the term I will be using throughout the rest of the presentation. Many pathogens can make people sick, but you cannot see, smell or taste them.

Slide # 6

Do you think you have ever had a foodborne illness? Foodborne illnesses really do happen.

Every year well over 76 million people become ill from a foodborne illness 5000 - 9000 people die.

Think about it. Would that many people eat something if they thought it tasted, looked or smelled bad? Even if tasting would tell, a tiny bit can make you sick. If a food is contaminated with a pathogen, it can take from 1 hour to 6 weeks to become sick.

325,000 people are hospitalized with a foodborne illness every year and this has a big impact on our economy.

Research is also finding that about 2-3% of these illnesses will lead to a secondary long term illness.

Slide # 7

What are some of these secondary illnesses?

  • E-coli 0157:H7 can lead to kidney failure especially in infants and children.
  • Salmonella can lead to arthritis • Listeria can cause meningitis and stillbirths.
  • And Campylobacter is known to cause Guillian-Barre syndrome also known as French polio.

Slide # 8

So why do you need to know—or care—about food safety? Food that is not handled properly can cause very serious illnesses for anyone of us, but 4 groups of people are at especially high risk. Do you ever feed any of these folks at your events?

  • Young children.
  • Older adults—and that is anyone over 65.
  • Pregnant women.
  • And anyone who has a weakened immune system.
  • That could be someone going through chemotherapy or radiation.
  • Or someone with diabetes or kidney disease.
  • It could be people taking certain medicines.
  • Or folks who are seriously ill.

Because these high risk groups are often a part of our large group meals, it means we need to be especially careful when preparing and serving food where they may be eating.

Slide # 9

Food safety begins when you are planning your large group event.

Be prepared. Think through your equipment and space needs. For example: If oven space is limited, you do not want to plan a menu consisting of roast meat, baked potatoes and hot apple pie—all needing oven space. If there is limited refrigerator space that may determine the type or number of salads to be served.

Also figure in the time factor. Remember it takes a lot longer for 10 quarts of water to boil than it does 2 quarts.

Do you need any kind of license? Check with your Local Environmental health department. Obtaining the correct license helps to protect your organization and assures that you are using the best food safety practices—and yes Churches sometimes need to have a license— especially if you are selling food to the public.

Always have a reliable person in charge of a large group event. Someone that will oversee all aspects of the meal and that knows food safety practices. When you have other people helping with any large group meal be sure to provide them with specific directions. Don't assume everyone knows food safety practices. The best method for these directions is to have them in writing. Better yet, if possible have training sessions for your volunteers.

Slide # 10

The temperature of the food is critical for food safety. This thermometer shows the Temperature Danger Zone which is 40 degrees F to 140 degrees F. This is the range of temperatures you want to keep perishable foods out of.

Thus, to keep cold foods cold they need to be 40 degrees F or below and to keep hot foods hot they must be 140 degrees F or above.

Slide # 11

Time is also very important to food safety. The 2 hour rule states that perishable food should not be in the danger zone (40 degrees F to 140 degrees F) for more than 2 hours, and if the weather is 90 degrees you only have 1 hour. These are the temperatures at which pathogens grow and multiply the fastest. Any food left in the danger zone for more than the 2 hours should not be eaten.

Slide # 12

Keep food safety in mind when you are shopping at the grocery store or market. Do not purchase canned goods that are dented, cracked or bulging as these might be warning signs of dangerous pathogens growing inside the can. In your shopping cart, separate raw meat, poultry and seafood from other foods—especially any ready to eat foods like baked products or fresh fruits and vegetables. To help guard against cross contamination, put raw meat and poultry into a plastic bag so meat juices won't drip on other foods that will be eaten raw.

Slide # 13

Remember the temperature danger zone and the 2 hour rule even when transporting food in your car. Keep any perishable items inside the air conditioned car—not in the trunk. Take a cooler with ice or frozen gel packs along if you have a distance to travel or it is a hot summer day. Keep your vehicle clean and free of possible contaminants and remember that food and animals should not be transported together.

Slide # 14

Storing your food at the correct temperature is important. To be certain you are keeping your food out of the temperature danger zone when it is stored in the freezer or refrigerator you will need to use an appliance thermometer.

Your freezer should be at 0 degrees F or lower. To keep the food in the refrigerator at 40 degrees F or lower the interior temperature in the refrigerator would generally need to be about 38 degrees F.

To check the temperature place the appliance thermometer in the warmest part of the refrigerator which is usually close to the door and away from the cooling/freezing unit.

Slide # 15

A high percentage of the foodborne illness outbreaks in Minnesota every year are caused by people—those handling the food. Anyone who handles food for others should:

  • Shower or bathe daily.
  • Wear clean clothing.
  • Keep fingernails short, clean and free of polish or false fingernails.
  • Not wear jewelry.
  • And do not handle food for others if you are ill with vomiting or diarrhea—these are often symptoms of Norovirus.

Slide # 16

The transmission of Norovirus is currently the number 1 cause of foodborne illness outbreaks in Minnesota. It is often mistakenly referred to as the stomach flu. Symptoms include vomiting, diarrhea, and stomach cramping—same as foodborne illness, right? Norovirus is found in the stools and vomit of infected people and then it is spread to food, water or surfaces by our hands. Good handwashing can help prevent the spread of Norovirus. It is very contagious!

Slide # 17

The disgusting part of foodborne illnesses is that the pathogens can pass out of us in our feces and can survive on our fingers and hands unless hand washing is very thorough. They can then get into your food if someone with unwashed hands touches your food, beverage, plate, fork, etc. Proper and frequent handwashing is a key to food safety!

When and how should we wash our hands?

Slide # 18

Wash your hands before preparing food; after using the restroom or changing diapers; after handling animals; after carrying boxes or cans of food or touching garbage; after touching your hair or body; after coughing, sneezing, blowing your nose; after shaking hands, using the phone, handling money; after going from a raw product to a ready to eat product—for example: cutting up a raw chicken and then making a sandwich.

Remember to wash and rewash your hands often!

Slide # 19

This poster shows the proper techniques of handwashing.

The first step is to wet your hands using water between 70 and 110 degrees F.

Step 2. Apply soap—and it doesn't matter what kind, as the soap just makes it slippery for the pathogens to wash away.

Step 3. The most important step: scrub for at least 20 seconds. You will need to figure out something that will take that amount of time for you. Some examples are:

  • Sing Happy Birthday to yourself.
  • Say the a,b,c's count whatever will take you 20 seconds.

Step 4. Rinse your hands with warm/hot water.

And the last step—dry your hands on a paper towel that can be thrown away.

Slide # 20

Single use gloves can help keep food safe by creating a barrier between hands and food but they are not a magic bullet for food safety, nor are they a substitute for hand washing. Before putting gloves on you must wash your hands thoroughly. You must change them often. Never re-use them! If you are the person in charge of a group of volunteers be sure to have single use gloves available and—very important—provide different glove sizes and to be on the safe side provide gloves made from materials other than latex, for those who are sensitive to latex.

Slide # 21

Use hot, soapy water to wash food contact surfaces such as countertops, cutting boards, as well as dishes. Wash these things after preparing each food item and before you go on to the next.

A solution of 1 tablespoon of unscented, liquid chlorine bleach and 1 gallon of water may be used to sanitize washed surfaces and utensils.

Slide # 22

Wash all fruits and vegetables that will be consumed raw. This includes foods like bananas, oranges, melons—those where the rind will not be consumed but surely carry a great deal of pathogens. Wash them under cool running water. Do not use soap, bleach, vinegar, etc.

Slide # 23

The thawing of frozen foods should be done:

  • In the refrigerator—think about those 9 turkeys—how will you thaw them?
  • Or under cool running drinkable water, 70 degrees or lower.
  • In the microwave, but then you must continue to cook the food immediately.
  • Or as part of the cooking process.
  • Never thaw food on the counter.

Slide # 24

Cross-contamination is also a cause for foodborne illnesses. Cross-contamination is when pathogens are transferred from one surface to another. Using separate cutting boards and other equipment helps prevent cross contamination.

For example here the white board would only be used for raw meat and the yellow one for raw vegetables.

Keep raw and cooked foods separate in storage areas too.

Slide # 25

It is good to have cutting boards that can be washed in a dishwasher where the temperature is higher than one could handle in a sink.

Slide # 26

The only way to know the temperature of your food is to check with a food thermometer. Insert the thermometer into the thickest part of the food.

You cannot use visual cues to determine whether food has been cooked to a safe internal temperature.

Slide # 27

These examples of ground beef patties show this point very clearly. According to the USDA, 160 degrees F is the safe internal temperature for ground beef. Which patties look done? Which patties are actually safe to eat?

Slide # 28

Meat may be contaminated with e-coli 0157:H7 pathogens from animal feces during slaughter. This makes meats, particularly ground meats like hamburger, unsafe to eat when undercooked.

Slide # 29

Occasional Quantity Cooks

If you are using a digital thermometer wait until the dial stabilizes and then compare to the USDA's recommended minimum internal temperatures. For all poultry the minimum internal temperature is 165 degrees F.

Slide # 30

Keep hot foods hot. Once the food has reached the minimum internal temperature keep it at 140 degrees F or above and keep checking the temperature.

Slide # 31

When cooling foods, once again remember the 2 hour rule and the danger zone temperatures. Divide food into shallow pans no more than 2-3' in depth. Divide foods like a turkey or a large roast into small portions. To quickly cool foods like soups or stews, place the containers in ice water and stir to help the product cool faster. Metal containers cool food faster than glass or plastic.

Occasional Quantity Cooks

Slide # 32

When you are trying to hold foods, maybe it is on a buffet table, remember the 2 hour rule! Think about it and plan ahead of time how you will keep cold foods at 40 degrees F or lower and/or hot foods at 140 degrees F or above.

Here is an example of keeping cold foods cold—but remember you still need to use a food thermometer and be certain that the food itself stays 40 degrees or below.

Notice the ice and covers that will help in keeping the food colder longer. Having smaller containers on the serving table will also mean that the food will be consumed sooner and may not reach the danger zone. Do not add new food to a serving dish that already contained food, if it has been sitting in the danger zone for awhile. Instead replace empty platters/bowls with freshly filled food and of course you need to keep checking and monitor the temperatures.

Slide # 33

Serving can also contaminate food. When you serve food avoid touching any surface that comes in contact with food. Remember you need to train your servers in food safety practices too!

Slide # 34

To summarize, the keys to a successful large quantity meal are:

  • Plan, plan, plan—and remember the details.
  • Keep everything and everyone clean.
  • Remember the temperature danger zone and the 2 hour rule.
  • And then prevent cross contamination from taking place.

Slide # 35

It doesn't matter what the occasion is, who you're serving or what you are serving, what matters is that you handle food safely!

Occasional Quantity Cooks Training

Food safety tips and ideas for the occasional quantity cook

It’s scary to think that people might get sick from the food you serve at a large group event, but it can and does happen! Each year, millions of people suffer from foodborne illness. While foodborne illness can be as mild as a stomach ache, it can also be fatal or cause long-term disabilities.

You may be a good cook, but cooking for a large crowd is different! Therefore, anyone who plans, prepares, or serves food at a large group event must be aware of and practice safe food handling practices.

Lesson materials

Participant materials (in order of use)

  • Potluck Events fact sheet- Minnesota Department of Health
  • Norovirus fact sheet- Minnesota Department of Health

Learner outcomes

As a result of this lesson, participants will be able to:

  • Recognize factors that can lead to foodborne illness.
  • Follow proper food handling and food safety practices.
  • Help volunteers plan, prepare and serve food safely for large groups.
  • Recognize the impact foodborne illness could have on a food event.

Preparing to facilitate the lesson

As discussion leader/teacher, your job is to present discussion questions and activities like those suggested in the lesson materials. You are not expected to be the “expert,” but are responsible for leading others in discussion and in encouraging an open, sharing atmosphere.

Before the group meets:

  • Review the video and the lesson materials.
  • Have copies of the participant handouts and the evaluation form for each participant.

Suggested lesson outline

Introductory activity

Have participants share a concern or question they have about cooking safely for a large group of people.

Discussion

  • Review the lesson objectives with the participants.
  • Show the “Cooking Safely For a Crowd” video, pausing for discussion when appropriate. (Video run time: 19 minutes)
  • Discussion questions using the information from the video:
    • Can you identify the ways that pathogens (harmful viruses and bacteria) can get into the food you may be serving at your event?
    • Can you find ways to stop the pathogens from growing that might be in the food?
    • How should/would you thaw large amounts of food? For example: 20 turkeys for a community dinner or large containers of frozen lasagna.
    • What are the food safety issues with a funeral lunch? How would you send ham sandwiches home after the lunch?
    • What are three practical food safety tips for consumers?

Possible group activities using the handouts

  1. Planning the quantity food occasion: menus and recipes.
    • Considering a large group event familiar to all participants, take turns explaining how each of the categories listed should be handled. Example: Location - consider where the event is held and the decisions that need to be made when selecting a menu for this large group event.
  2. Potluck events fact sheet.
    • As discussion leader read one of the situations listed on the handout and ask participants if the event is considered a potluck event or if it requires a license.
  3. Norovirus fact sheet.
    • Read together, discuss and share thoughts about how to prevent the spread of Norovirus at any of your food events.
  4. Service styles: risks and safe practices.
    • Discuss and share ideas on the risks and safe practices of various serving styles.
  5. Table setting procedure.
    • Have plates, cups, glasses and silverware available for all participants to practice the proper way of handling each to prevent contamination from your hands and fingers.

Summarize

  • Identify the main points that participants have learned.
  • As a result of learning more about Cooking Safely For a Crowd, discuss what changes participants plan to make at their large group food events.
  • Cooking for Groups, A Volunteer’s Guide to Food Safety, United States Department of Agriculture.
  • Kitchen Companion, Your Safe Food Handbook, United States Department of Agriculture.
  • Minnesota Department of Agriculture.
  • Minnesota Department of Health, Minnesota Food Code, Chapter 4626, Extracted from Minnesota Rules 1998, Minnesota Office of the Revisor of Statutes, 1998.
  • Minnesota Department of Health.
  • Occasional Quantity Cooks Trainer’s Manual, Ohio State University Extension, 1994.
  • United States Department of Agriculture, Food Safety and Inspection Service.

Reviewed in 2018