Posts Tagged Restaurant Equipment

To coldzone or not to coldzone, that is the fryer question

Starting off with the correct deep fryer for your restaurants application is the first step in ensuring that your fried foods deliver the high quality taste that customers demand and meet the health requirements that federal and watchdog agencies are pushing for. Finding out which deep fryer will work best for your restaurant will not only deliver a better quality and healthier fried food but help extend the oil life in your deep fryer. To find the right fryer for your restaurant equipment needs you must evaluate your menu.

There are numerous types of fryers on the market today, so much so that choosing the right one can be an overwhelming task. It is best to start at the most basic level and the your way down to determine what type of fryer you need when looking at restaurant equipment. At the most general level there are two types of deep fryer, those with sediment zones and those with out. Your menu will decide what type of fryer that your restaurant will need. The sediment zone enhances the fry cycle by allowing pieces the pieces of breading on the fried food that separates from the main bulk to drift away from the cooking area into a cold zone. We can break this down again into three basic types of fryer, each with it’s own benefits which are again determined by the type of fried food on your menu.

Open-Pot Fryers have a deep, almost V shaped, sediment zone at the bottom of the fryer with the heating elements located on the outside of the frypot. This type of fryer performs well in a range of applications but are best used for lightly breaded items like prepackaged foods and french fries. A nice side benefit to an Open-Pot fryer is the fact that cleaning is relatively easy as the entire pot is accessible.

Tube-type Fryers have a wide cold zone located all the way across the bottom of the frypot with the heating conductors located above the cold zone but again all the way across the frypot. With such a wide zone to collect sediment, the tube type fryer is a good choice for wet and heavily battered items like fresh fish and onion blossoms.

Flat-bottom Fryers have no sediment collection zones. The frypot sits directly on top of the heating element and any sediment that falls off the food item stays in the fry area. Like the Open-Pot fryer, the Flat bottom fryer is easy to clean and are generally best for cooking items that float on the top of the frying oil during the fry cycle Wet battered fish would be a prime example of an item that this type of fryer would work best for.

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Five steps for healthy fried foods

In today’s marketplace it isn’t easy to be the owner of a restaurant. With every turn it seems like there are new regulations, new health suggestions, and a host of other voices telling you the proper way to cook your food. It is getting harder and harder to find the balance between delivering healthy fried foods and delivering maximum taste. Add to it that patrons have made it perfectly clear they are not going to sacrifice taste just because the Government or some health agency is mandating or demanding changes. Look at any menu with healthy choices over a period of time and keep track of the number of items that are removed because they weren’t ordered; customers have signaled that if the item doesn’t taste good they won’t eat it, no matter how healthy it is.

Enter deep fried foods. Even in an increasingly health food conscious society the demand for deep friend foods is sky rocketing with patrons. A global research company, Mintel, shows that chicken nuggets & wings, fried mozzarella & cheddar sticks, and fried onion rings are among the best selling appetizers on the chain franchise menus today. With this hard data it becomes clear that deep frying foods is one of the most popular means of cooking with customers and that provides a challenge for those caught in the middle of meeting customer demands and meeting Government mandates on healthy foods.

While the challenge of deep frying foods seems to be overwhelming, there is actually a very simple methodology that can help you assure your deep frying methods are meeting current health issues such as trans fat, in addition to meeting the customers demands on taste. Plus, any restaurant owner will know that frying oil is skyrocketing in cost. Frymaster LLC, a Manitowoc Foodservice company created a five step method that offers a best practice guide to handling all of these concerns. It consists of five steps a restaurant owner can follow that will create fried foods that are both flavorful and healthy.

Over the next few days we’ll cover these five steps, how they work and what they mean for your business.

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Trans fat and how it drives the restaurant industry

With trans fat being such a huge consumer concern in the last decade, and continuing to grow, the prepackaged food industry began making voluntary moves to remove or reduce the amount of trans fats in their products. Granted this voluntary move really picked up steam once the Government mandated that trans fats needed to be documented on nutritional labeling, but the fact still remains that great effort has made by the prepackaged industry to get on board the trans fat bandwagon.

The focus of trans fat has now shifted to the food service industry, where it is estimated by some source that up to 38% of our fat intake comes from. The use of partially hydrogenated frying oil and ingredients containing trans fat are both large contributors to the fat content of a menu item. Since the food service industry does not have to offer nutritional labeling and the availability of that information is limited, it is often difficult for patrons to make informed choices regarding the consumption of trans fat while eating out.

In response to this growing concern several U.S. cities have begun the move toward mandating the removal of trans fats in restaurants. The approach so far as been to do this in stages, normally starting off with guidelines stating that all shortening, margarine and oils that are used in cooking contain less than half a milligram of trans fat per serving. Once the first stage is in place the second phase normally involves expanding the half a milligram requirement to other items including baked goods.

This push towards the removal of trans fats is having a pull marketing direction on the distributors as demand for trans fat free cooking oils and ingredients sky rockets. There is also a push marketing effort taking place as the restaurants who have taken the effort to reduce or remove trans fats from their menus are increasing the amount of materials available to their patrons explaining the benefits of being a trans fat free establishment.

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