SlideShare a Scribd company logo
B A L A N C E D M E N U S
Serve healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
Linda Hansen, CDM, CFPP, Director of Nutrition Services
St. Joseph Health System, Sonoma County
Linda.Hansen@stjoe.org
Started with the Creekside Café
Staff and visitor meals
• Added vegetarian beans/legumes to menu in addition
to chili and soup
• Instead of 2 days per week, offered vegetarian dish
everyday in addition to the main entrée
• Improved salad bar offerings: more fresh local
produce, protein alternatives (tofu, beans, cheese)
• Kept pricing low for “healthy” items, and raised prices
on “unhealthy” items to maintain margin
B A L A N C E D M E N U S
Serve healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
 Cafeteria Menus   Sustainable Protein    Vegetarian Entrées 
Prior to Fall 2008 0% 8%
Fall 2008 5% 32%
Increase : 5%   24%
Cafeteria Results
EXAMPLES ♣Tofu Stir Fry ♣Lentil Stew ♣Spicy Sesame Noodles ♣Vegetarian Chick Peas
♣Stuffed Tomatoes W/Couscous ♣Bean and Rice Stew ♣Asparagus, Leek And Gruyere Quiche
♣Cheese Polenta ♣Brazilian Black Beans ♣Quinoa, Corn & Black Bean Stew ♣Bean & Kale
Ragu
 Increased revenue by $89,220 (11%) from 2006 to 2009 
 Vegetarian entrees are well accepted by customers in Café 
(They had been requesting them for awhile!)
 Almost 5,000 pounds less meat prepared per year in Café;
~150 tons of GHG Emissions saved!
B A L A N C E D M E N U S
Serve healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
Looked at Patient Menu
Three pronged approach to achieve
“Balanced Menu”
1) changed some of the existing
vegetarian entrées to first choice
 Avg. ~100 less meat servings/meal
2) replaced unpopular meat entrées with
vegetarian or casseroles with less meat
3) used the cost savings to replace meat
entrées with sustainably raised beef or
poultry
B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
• $12,000 projected savings by reducing meat, poultry and
fish
• $6,000 in increased costs for free range chicken and
grass fed beef
• Despite a 35-50% price increase for the “sustainably
raised” proteins, the menu overall will save the hospital
over $5,000 per year, some of which will be used to offer
more fresh, local items on patient menu
This is important because, unlike cafeteria items, we can’t
charge more when we spend more on patient meals
PROJECTED SAVINGS, PATIENT MENU
B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
CHALLENGES (Mostly on Patient Menus)
 Procurement
 Our primary vendor does not supply or carry sustainable proteins/meats
 When we found “natural” or “free range” meats, they were industrially raised
 Sysco does not carry California Rice; had to find an alternative source.
 The rice was a different grain than cooks were used to. Production
challenges.
 No one has locality information for produce (except Country of Origin)
 One vendor promise local, and we received squash from Mexico!
We decided to use local vendors at first, and then work on having primary vendor
stock specific items for us when we establish weekly volumes
 Nutrition
 The clinical dietitians had concerns about our elderly patients’ acceptance of
vegan dishes and the effect of less consumption on healing
 The vegan & legume recipes we proposed were lower in protein than
traditional meat entrées (patients need protein to heal)
 They were considered more difficult to digest
 Nurses had concerns about the bookmarks; they thought they meant we were
giving less protein per meal.
For this round of changes we stuck with more traditional vegetarian entrees that
include cheese and dairy. Did not use vegan recipes for patients.
B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
Used $$ savings to buy sustainable
proteins
 Changed Tri Tip to Grass Fed Chuck
 Less expensive cut of meat was acceptable
because of the braising process; minimized cost
impact
 Changed Grilled Chicken Sandwich to a
Grilled Free Range Chicken Breast
 Saved the expense and time of assembling
sandwiches, and offered local rice as a side dish
 Very challenging to prepare; dries out quickly.
We’ve had to make adjustments on trayline
 Changed Meatloaf and Taco Salad ground
beef to Grass Fed
B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
ACHIEVED GOAL OF DECREASING CARBON FOOTPRINT
Patient
Trayline
Sustainable
Protein Vegetarian
Prior to Fall 2008 0% 14%
Fall 2008 20% 20%
Increase per
category: 20% 6%
Based on the “Food and Diet Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Calculator” from HCWH, Santa Rosa Memorial will reduce
GHG emissions by about 200 tons by reducing meat on
patient menus by 7,400 pounds/year
B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
Result in overall expense: Meat Category
Baseline 2007: $312,000
After “Balanced Menus:”
in Café & Catering (2008): $276,000
for Patients & Café (2009): $270,000*
(Annualized)
*These amounts do not represent savings to the hospital. Costs for vegetarian
items are allocated to a non-meat food category.
B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
MARKETING AND EDUCATION
 A “Balanced Menu” pamphlet from SF-PSR
was distributed throughout the hospital to
educate staff, visitors, physicians and
patients on the rationale for the changes.
 An informational bookmark that explains the
health benefits is sent on patient meal trays
to continue the education process.
 Articles were placed in “Noon News,” “Nuts
News,” “Connections” and other
communications within the hospital
 Took pamphlets and bookmarks to outside
meetings and community events

More Related Content

PDF
Cabbage Recipe Card
PPTX
Green collar food waste recycling initiative for bec
PPTX
Sustainable agriculture for the future we want
PPT
2009 Csa Agm
PPTX
Kentucky And The State Of Food
PDF
BCCF Year 2 Update Guelph Org. Conf. 2015 circulate
PDF
Allrecipes Measuring Cup Report March 2010
PPT
Get Green Challenge: Angela Eichstedt
Cabbage Recipe Card
Green collar food waste recycling initiative for bec
Sustainable agriculture for the future we want
2009 Csa Agm
Kentucky And The State Of Food
BCCF Year 2 Update Guelph Org. Conf. 2015 circulate
Allrecipes Measuring Cup Report March 2010
Get Green Challenge: Angela Eichstedt

Viewers also liked (20)

PPT
Active Lesson
PPT
What are food miles
PDF
Creative thinking; start training your brain today
PPTX
Practicum presentation
PDF
Creative thinking presentation kaleidoscope
PPT
Long johns powerpoint
PDF
Safe working practices
PPTX
Teamwork [autosaved]
PPTX
Teamwork by solomon sisay
PPTX
creative thinking and metacognition presentation report
PDF
Chinese Dish Names Extraction (IR Project)
PPS
A Nice Chinese Dish
PPT
Back Safety
PPT
Chapter 1 - Working Together in Collaboration, Consultation, and Teams
PDF
Presentation on Teamwork for Avoiding Potentially Avoidable Readmissions
PPTX
L3 food miles
PPTX
Food miles
PPTX
Presentation on food miles
PPTX
Chinese Food
PPTX
Want to improve the Customer Experience in your restaurant, hospitality or re...
Active Lesson
What are food miles
Creative thinking; start training your brain today
Practicum presentation
Creative thinking presentation kaleidoscope
Long johns powerpoint
Safe working practices
Teamwork [autosaved]
Teamwork by solomon sisay
creative thinking and metacognition presentation report
Chinese Dish Names Extraction (IR Project)
A Nice Chinese Dish
Back Safety
Chapter 1 - Working Together in Collaboration, Consultation, and Teams
Presentation on Teamwork for Avoiding Potentially Avoidable Readmissions
L3 food miles
Food miles
Presentation on food miles
Chinese Food
Want to improve the Customer Experience in your restaurant, hospitality or re...
Ad

Similar to 2009 Balanced Menu Presentation, simple (20)

PDF
Fostering Health and Equity healthcare models for changing food environments
PDF
8_-_Sustainable_Nutrition_(1).pdf
PPTX
Culinary Medicine: Retooling Your Menu and Your Health
PPT
PDF
Keto considerations
PDF
Sustainable food: how to eat more healthy at home and an event
PPT
Healthy Meal Planning
DOCX
Fact file
PDF
Foodu
PPTX
Green Dining Program
PPT
Emergency food & health
PDF
WORKSHOP 1: Gladys Wong_Food_2017
PPTX
sustainable cooking
PPT
Organic Growth: Being Green to Build Customer Loyalty
DOC
Kidneydisease case study
PDF
Takeaways unwrapped event 070411 jemma grime presentation - changing market...
PPTX
DOCX
hcs data proposal
PPT
LET'S PUT THE VEG ON THE TABLE
PPTX
Frozen Snacking Trends
Fostering Health and Equity healthcare models for changing food environments
8_-_Sustainable_Nutrition_(1).pdf
Culinary Medicine: Retooling Your Menu and Your Health
Keto considerations
Sustainable food: how to eat more healthy at home and an event
Healthy Meal Planning
Fact file
Foodu
Green Dining Program
Emergency food & health
WORKSHOP 1: Gladys Wong_Food_2017
sustainable cooking
Organic Growth: Being Green to Build Customer Loyalty
Kidneydisease case study
Takeaways unwrapped event 070411 jemma grime presentation - changing market...
hcs data proposal
LET'S PUT THE VEG ON THE TABLE
Frozen Snacking Trends
Ad

2009 Balanced Menu Presentation, simple

  • 1. B A L A N C E D M E N U S Serve healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs. Linda Hansen, CDM, CFPP, Director of Nutrition Services St. Joseph Health System, Sonoma County Linda.Hansen@stjoe.org
  • 2. Started with the Creekside Café Staff and visitor meals • Added vegetarian beans/legumes to menu in addition to chili and soup • Instead of 2 days per week, offered vegetarian dish everyday in addition to the main entrée • Improved salad bar offerings: more fresh local produce, protein alternatives (tofu, beans, cheese) • Kept pricing low for “healthy” items, and raised prices on “unhealthy” items to maintain margin B A L A N C E D M E N U S Serve healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.
  • 3. B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs.  Cafeteria Menus   Sustainable Protein    Vegetarian Entrées  Prior to Fall 2008 0% 8% Fall 2008 5% 32% Increase : 5%   24% Cafeteria Results EXAMPLES ♣Tofu Stir Fry ♣Lentil Stew ♣Spicy Sesame Noodles ♣Vegetarian Chick Peas ♣Stuffed Tomatoes W/Couscous ♣Bean and Rice Stew ♣Asparagus, Leek And Gruyere Quiche ♣Cheese Polenta ♣Brazilian Black Beans ♣Quinoa, Corn & Black Bean Stew ♣Bean & Kale Ragu  Increased revenue by $89,220 (11%) from 2006 to 2009   Vegetarian entrees are well accepted by customers in Café  (They had been requesting them for awhile!)  Almost 5,000 pounds less meat prepared per year in Café; ~150 tons of GHG Emissions saved!
  • 4. B A L A N C E D M E N U S Serve healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs. Looked at Patient Menu Three pronged approach to achieve “Balanced Menu” 1) changed some of the existing vegetarian entrées to first choice  Avg. ~100 less meat servings/meal 2) replaced unpopular meat entrées with vegetarian or casseroles with less meat 3) used the cost savings to replace meat entrées with sustainably raised beef or poultry
  • 5. B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs. • $12,000 projected savings by reducing meat, poultry and fish • $6,000 in increased costs for free range chicken and grass fed beef • Despite a 35-50% price increase for the “sustainably raised” proteins, the menu overall will save the hospital over $5,000 per year, some of which will be used to offer more fresh, local items on patient menu This is important because, unlike cafeteria items, we can’t charge more when we spend more on patient meals PROJECTED SAVINGS, PATIENT MENU
  • 6. B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs. CHALLENGES (Mostly on Patient Menus)  Procurement  Our primary vendor does not supply or carry sustainable proteins/meats  When we found “natural” or “free range” meats, they were industrially raised  Sysco does not carry California Rice; had to find an alternative source.  The rice was a different grain than cooks were used to. Production challenges.  No one has locality information for produce (except Country of Origin)  One vendor promise local, and we received squash from Mexico! We decided to use local vendors at first, and then work on having primary vendor stock specific items for us when we establish weekly volumes  Nutrition  The clinical dietitians had concerns about our elderly patients’ acceptance of vegan dishes and the effect of less consumption on healing  The vegan & legume recipes we proposed were lower in protein than traditional meat entrées (patients need protein to heal)  They were considered more difficult to digest  Nurses had concerns about the bookmarks; they thought they meant we were giving less protein per meal. For this round of changes we stuck with more traditional vegetarian entrees that include cheese and dairy. Did not use vegan recipes for patients.
  • 7. B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs. Used $$ savings to buy sustainable proteins  Changed Tri Tip to Grass Fed Chuck  Less expensive cut of meat was acceptable because of the braising process; minimized cost impact  Changed Grilled Chicken Sandwich to a Grilled Free Range Chicken Breast  Saved the expense and time of assembling sandwiches, and offered local rice as a side dish  Very challenging to prepare; dries out quickly. We’ve had to make adjustments on trayline  Changed Meatloaf and Taco Salad ground beef to Grass Fed
  • 8. B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs. ACHIEVED GOAL OF DECREASING CARBON FOOTPRINT Patient Trayline Sustainable Protein Vegetarian Prior to Fall 2008 0% 14% Fall 2008 20% 20% Increase per category: 20% 6% Based on the “Food and Diet Greenhouse Gas Emissions Calculator” from HCWH, Santa Rosa Memorial will reduce GHG emissions by about 200 tons by reducing meat on patient menus by 7,400 pounds/year
  • 9. B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs. Result in overall expense: Meat Category Baseline 2007: $312,000 After “Balanced Menus:” in Café & Catering (2008): $276,000 for Patients & Café (2009): $270,000* (Annualized) *These amounts do not represent savings to the hospital. Costs for vegetarian items are allocated to a non-meat food category.
  • 10. B A L A N C E D M E N U SServe healthy food. Mitigate climate change. Reduce costs. MARKETING AND EDUCATION  A “Balanced Menu” pamphlet from SF-PSR was distributed throughout the hospital to educate staff, visitors, physicians and patients on the rationale for the changes.  An informational bookmark that explains the health benefits is sent on patient meal trays to continue the education process.  Articles were placed in “Noon News,” “Nuts News,” “Connections” and other communications within the hospital  Took pamphlets and bookmarks to outside meetings and community events