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Philly cheesesteak earns a price break

To “clean” up his school’s cheesesteak, Chef Kevin Frank replaced the meat product with one that’s more healthful and saves seven cents per serving.

Patricia Cobe, Senior Editor

December 15, 2015

1 Min Read
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When feeding the 50,000 students in the Detroit Public Schools, District Chef Kevin Frank not only has to stay within a budget of $1.37 per pupil per day, he’s committed to doing so while eliminating “seven ingredients of concern,” part of an initiative through LifeTime Fitness’ Life Time Foundation to better school nutrition. “This is very difficult to do without scratch cooking, and we’re strictly a heat-and-serve district,” says Frank. To “clean” up the school menu’s cheesesteak, he replaced the sandwich’s cooked meat product with one that’s more healthful, versatile and saves seven cents per serving. 

  1. Frank found a local supplier who produces a precooked beef filling that’s typically used in a meat pie. “It’s more like ground-beef crumbles than the shredded beef I was using before,” he says. Plus it has no artificial coloring, one of the ingredients he aims to avoid.
     

  2. Previously, kitchen staff would thaw and heat frozen peppers and onions separately. The new product includes the vegetables in the crumbled-beef mixture. Each cheesesteak sandwich gets 2 ounces of beef and an ounce of mozzarella cheese for a total of 3 ounces of protein.  
     

  3. Although Frank initially planned to use 3 ounces of meat per sandwich, “it was too pricey per serving,” he says. But he now gets more bang for his buck, as he cross-utilizes the meat filling in pasta sauce, shepherd’s pie and tacos.

recipe revamp graph

About the Author

Patricia Cobe

Senior Editor

Pat plans and executes the menu sections of Restaurant Business and FoodService Director, covering food and beverage trends, Menu R&D, profiles of chefs and restaurateurs and Technomic research. She also contributes to the digital content of both RB and FSD and is editor of two weekly e-newsletters, Recipe Report and On the Menu. Pat’s weekly podcast, MenuFeed, covers a wide range of menu topics through interviews with chefs and operators.

Pat came to Winsight from Hearst, where she was an executive editor. She is the co-author of the Mompreneurs series of books as well as two cookbooks. She graduated from Cornell University and earned a Masters in Journalism from Boston University. She is active in several professional organizations, including Les Dames d’Escoffier and the International Foodservice Editorial Council (IFEC), and serves as a judge for the James Beard Media Awards.

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