They may
have been raised on organic milk and farmers market veggies, but when students
line up at Marin’s high-ed campus cafes, are they still chowing down on the
same starch-heavy, overcooked food that their parents most likely remember from
their college days?
Not
quite.
That means
fresh, local and, in more and more cases, organic and sustainable. At
Dominican, where the food service is managed by the Bay Area’s Bon Appétit
Management Company (BAMCO), a rolling series of programs begun in the ‘00s looks
at the company’s sourcing and food management practices at each of its campus
food contracts to bring socially responsible and healthful practices – for the
students and for the earth - to every aspect of the dining experience.
Leslie
Panion, Catering Director for the Dominican campus, manages the details for
feeding 700 student and faculty lunches every day and ensures that BAMCO’s 20
percent local/sustainable initiative, launched in 2007, is ordinary business
behind the scenes. Cage-free eggs, organic
milk and produce, all sourced from within 150 miles, are now standard. The very
popular salad bar rotates its toppings according to what’s in season and
available from farmers in Marin, Sonoma and other Bay Area counties. Dominican’s cafeteria runs four lines every
day: classics, taqueria, wok and tossed to order salads; and all of them now
serve entirely locally sourced foods.
Dominican’s
head chef Martin Zuniga, with BAMCO since 1994, translates the sustainability initiatives
into cuisine students actually want.
“Gluten-free is big right now,” he said “and students always want
hand-held foods.” That means taking the
soy sauce out of wok-tossed entrees and replacing it with lemon-lime dressing
and salt and, on the taqueria line, Zuniga gives students the choice of a wheat
tortilla or a wheat-free corn tortilla for their quesadilla.
“There’s
been an explosion of unique dietary needs,” said Panion. “Gluten-free is now
very important and so is vegan (and dairy-free) [sic] so we label everything,”
she said. Students can further customize their lunch. Protein? On the side. Sauce? On the side. Cheese? On
the side. “And we don’t cook at all
anymore with peanut oil,” Panion added.
Over at the
College of Marin, a student survey of the Kentfield on-campus cafeteria in 2009
revealed that students wanted the same things as those at Dominican – fresh,
high-quality, flavorful foods with more sensitivity to special diets and an eye
on international flavors at a great price. Suzy Lee, Operations Manager for the
Bay Area’s Fresh & Natural Food Services Group at COM’s Kentfield campus, is
revamping the entire food program to meet these demands. On board since
October, 2011, Lee and chef Victor prepare everything from scratch every
day. A new salad bar was installed upon
her arrival and fresh, seasonally inspired soups are now a daily menu feature.
“You can
get a vegan burrito every day” said Arnulfo Cedillo, Director of Student
Affairs. “There was huge pent-up demand for vegan and vegetarian items.” That
could mean a veggie burger made with whole grain brown rice and beans on the
grill station, fresh crab roll or California roll maki at the deli or
stir-fried tofu with fresh vegetables and spicy, house made dressing. And just
about everything comes in under $6.50 for lunch. “Price was a very big
concern,” said Lee. We developed a
coupon program so students could purchase the combo (grill special and salad)
at the best price,” she said.
Dominican, founded
by the Dominican Sisters of San Rafael and steeped in Catholic heritage, offers
seafood every Friday and, as of 2002, the dining hall adheres to the Monterey
Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch standards for sourcing all seafood. Nevertheless,
students “always want a hamburger and a hot dog,” said Panion. That is covered too - Panion purchases from
Fasciola Meats which sells a line of hormone-free, preservative free beef and
hot dogs. Other BAMCO practices - fair trade, farm to fork, low carbon and a
new green program to reduce packaging waste
- round out the initiatives. The Sisters maintain a garden, too and
Panion is looking into how to source from there. It does not get more fresh, local and
sustainable than that.
Recipes
courtesy of Suzy Lee
Tofu Salad
Sauce
1/4
cup soy sauce
2
teaspoon chili pepper powder
2
teaspoon sesame oil
2
tablespoon sugar
2
teaspoon sesame seed
Ingredients
1
medium green, red bell pepper
1
medium carrot
2 – 1
lb. blocks firm tofu
How to
cook:
1. Combine
all sauce ingredients.
2.
Drain tofu, then cut into thick slices.
3.
Heat a lightly oiled pan over high heat and cook tofu on each side until
browned and cooked through.
4. Cut
the red, green bell peppers and carrot into thin strips.
5. Mix
all the ingredients with sauce for 10 minutes.
6.
Serve on a platter with the sauce poured over.
Asian Salad
Ingredients
Green,
purple cabbage, carrots, cilantro, yellow corn and fried chow mein noodles.
Dressing
1/4
cup soy sauce
1/4
cup lemon juice
2
tablespoons of brown sugar
1
tablespoon white vinegar
1
teaspoon salt
1/2
teaspoon ground black pepper
1
tablespoon sesame oil
1/2
cup chopped green onions
How to
Cook
1. Cut
all vegetables into very thin strips
2.
Bake the corn for 3 minutes until light brown color and then cool down.
3.
Gently toss asian dressing with all the ingredients.
4.
Sprinkle the fried chow mein over the salad.
5.
Serve IMMEDIATELY
Labels: arnulfo cedillo, BAMCO, bay area fresh and natural, chef Martin Zuniga, COM Kentfield, dominican university dining, Leslie Panion, sustainable dining on campis, Suzy Lee, tofu salad recipe