1 / 24

Food and Beverage Management

Food and Beverage Management. Ch 8 Preparing for Production. The Flow of Food. Purchasing Receiving Storing Issuing Tracking and Control. Purchasing. Always purchase from a reputable Supplier

oksana
Download Presentation

Food and Beverage Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Food and Beverage Management Ch 8 Preparing for Production

  2. The Flow of Food • Purchasing • Receiving • Storing • Issuing • Tracking and Control

  3. Purchasing • Always purchase from a reputable Supplier • An Operation can save or lose money with a Purchasign System – Directly affects the bottom line • Purchase systems include • Requisitions • Purchase orders • Delivery Invoices

  4. Purchasing Flow

  5. Goals of a Purchasing System • Buy the right product • Buy the right amount • Pay the right price • Deal with the right supplier

  6. Buying the Right Product • Develop Purchase specifications • Quality • Size • Weight • Ripeness • Needed for each important item (ex. Filet) • Ex. – 8 up PSMO Choice Filet • Clearly communicated to Suppliers & Receivers

  7. Make or Buy • Convenience Foods – • Prepared off site • Some managers believe that quality is less than on site prep • Might be less costly • May be easier to purchase, receive, store and issue

  8. Make or Buy Analysis Example • Bloody Mary Mix • Purchase in 5 case lots - $31 case for 12 quart bottles • Cost per bottle = $2.45 after 5% discount on bulk purchase • Make on site – • Ingredient cost use standard recipe = $1.81 per quart • Labor Cost = .31 per quart (15 minutes of labor) • Total = $2.12 per quart • On site cost is $.33 cheaper than purchasing ready made

  9. Purchasing the Right Quantity • Cash Flow is adversely affected if inventory levels are too high • Too low – no product means lost sales and unhappy customers

  10. Minimum Maximum Ordering • Uses par levels – the minimum level of stock acceptable • Par Levels are determined by • Lead time quantity – number of units that will be used between the time the replacement stock is ordered and delivered • Safety Stock Level – in case of shortages, spoilage, etc • Get Bids from Several Suppliers

  11. Other Factors in Purchasing Levels • Changing Prices • Available Storage • Storage and handling costs • Waste and Spoilage • Theft • Market Conditions • Quantity discounts • Minimum Order requirements • Transportation and delivery • Order Costs • Freshness -

  12. Paying the Right Price • Get bids from Several Suppliers • Negotiate • Consider lower quality products • Do you really have to buy it? Can it be made better or cheaper on site? • Combine Orders • Re evaluate high cost items, especially things such as garnishes

  13. Paying the Right Price • Pay Cash – use discounts for paying promptly • Speculate on price trends • Change purchase unit size • Be innovative • Use Promotional Discounts • Bypass the supplier

  14. Suppliers • Location • Facility • Financial Stability • Technical Knowledge of the staff • Honesty and fairness • Dependability • Facility Inspections (own and regulatory) • HACCP Programs

  15. Other Concerns • Theft • Track Inventory • Kickbacks • Fictitious Companies • Ethics • Develop standards and policies • Integrity

  16. Receiving • Inspect each delivery against PO • Compare delivered Product against specifications – weights, etc. • Inspect against Delivery invoice • Verify Price per unit (against PO) • Verify math! • If not delivered (or rejected) – get a credit memo (signed!) • Accept Product (or reject) • If needed check temperatures • Check for pests • Store – label and date (for FIFO) • Complete reports (some PO ‘s are also HACCP Records)

  17. Storage • Security includes: • Lockable Storage areas • Precious storage • Limited Access • Effective inventory control procedures • Perpetual inventory system • Central Inventory control • Secure Design • Lighting and monitoring

  18. Quality • Rotate Food Stocks (FIFO) • Store foods at proper temperatures • Clean storage areas frequently • Ensure proper ventilation and air circulation

  19. Recordkeeping • Perpetual Inventory System • Similar to a checkbook • Confirm at regular intervals (use different people) • Physical Inventory System • Typically done once per month • Combination Systems

  20. Reducing Inventory Costs • Carry a smaller amount of inventory • Be sure required levels are correct • Decrease the number of items carried • Refuse to accept early deliveries

  21. Issuing Products • Issue only on proper authority • Depends on system – Perpetual Inventory needs a requisition • Requisitions should be entered daily

  22. Special Beverage Concerns • Typically buy by brand name • House or well brand • Call brand • Premium brands • Laws regarding suppliers vary by state • Laws regarding discounts vary by state • Inventory turnover rates are lower

  23. Special Beverage Concerns • More prone to theft • After received – move immediately to storage • Always use secured storage • Purchasing and receiving tasks should be separated • Issue on a bottle for bottle basis • Mark bottles with dates and times.

  24. Technology and Control • E Commerce – facilitates ordering with suppliers • JIT = Just in Time Inventory systems • Ordering Systems (FoodTrak) (www.foodtrak.com) • Customized software systems integrating recipe cards & purchasing • UPC codes

More Related