Bon Appétit Management Company
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| Bon Appétit Management Company | |
|---|---|
| Type | Private |
| Founded | 1987 (Palo Alto, CA) |
| Headquarters | Palo Alto, CA |
| Key people | Fedele Bauccio, CEO Michael Bauccio, COO |
| Industry | Sustainable Food Source Provider |
| Website | www.bamco.com |
The Bon Appétit Management Company is an onsite custom restaurant company that provides café and catering services to corporations, colleges and universities, and specialty venues. The company, based in Palo Alto, CA, operates 400 cafes in 28 states. Bon Appétit has developed programs with Environmental Defense, the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch, the Humane Society of the United States, and other conservation organizations [1].
Contents |
[edit] History
Company Milestones
- Founded in 1987 as a catering company[1]
- Farm to Fork program for local sourcing since 1999 [2]
- Sustainable seafood purchasing since 2002 [2]
- rBGH-free milk purchased as available since 2002 [2]
- Policy for anitibiotic reduction in chicken adopted in 2003 [2]
- Initiates policy to reduce antibiotic use in turkeys in 2005 [2]
- Establishes policy for cage-free shell eggs in 2005 [2]
- Launches the first annual Eat Local Challenge in 2005 [3]
- Sponsors Save Seafood campus film tour on ocean conservation in 2005/2006 [4]
- Drives Compass Group to purchase sustainable seafood in 2006 [5]
- Move to all "natural" beef burgers in 2007 [6]
- Launches Low Carbon Diet in 2007 [7]
[edit] Management
Fedele Bauccio, CEO
Michael Bauccio, COO
[edit] Sustainable Policies
Farm to Fork
Farm to Fork is a Bon Appétit company-wide initiative to buy locally. The first choice is to purchase seasonal, regional and organic produce from local farmers and artisan producers within a 150-mile radius. These local products are often served within 48 hours of harvest [2].
Seafood
Seafood is purchased in accordance with the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Seafood Watch guidelines for sustainable seafood. Locally-sourced fish is the first choice for seafood and tuna is dolphin-safe [2].
Meats
Bon Appétit works with ranchers to reduce the amount of drugs given to poultry, cows and pigs. The company purchases only chicken and turkey breast that has been produced without the non-therapeutic use of antibiotics that belong to classes of compounds approved for use in human medicine. Hamburgers are made with ground “natural” chuck, raised without antibiotics or added hormones on a vegetarian diet. Free-range, organic and grass-fed meats from local sources are served at many locations [6]
Cage-free eggs
Bon Appétit purchases cage-free shell eggs at all accounts. These eggs are from sources that meet the animal care standards of Humane Farm Animal Care, an independent farm animal welfare certifying organization [2].
Dairy
Milk is free of antibiotics and recombinant Bovine Growth Hormone (rBGH) where available. Local sources are the first choice for dairy purchases [2].
Circle of Responsibility The Circle of Responsibility is an educational program created by Bon Appétit to teach staff and diners about sustainability. After completing a training, café staff members are prepared to engage diners and teach them about the company's core sustainability principles. In addition, each café prominently displays Circle of Responsibility educational tools that help diners identify foods according to the categories of: health, vegetarian, vegan, organic, locally and responsibly sourced [2].
Fair Trade
Bon Appétit supports farmers' rights and offers Fair Trade Certified, shade grown and organic coffee options wherever possible [8].
Eat Local Challenge
This annual event, starting in 2005, challenges each Bon Appétit restaurant and café to serve a meal made entirely of ingredients from within a 150 mile radius of each kitchen. This includes every facet of the meal, from dairy and protein, with salt as the one exception [3].
Low Carbon Diet
The Low Carbon Diet, launched in April 2007, is Bon Appétit’s endeavor to reduce the carbon footprint of all its cafés. Food production -- including processing, transportation, packaging, preparation and waste -- is the single largest human-driven contributor to the greenhouse gases responsible for global climate change [9]. The Low Carbon Diet decreases carbon emissions by reducing use of high-carbon foods such as meat, promoting seasonality, eliminating foreign and bottled water, conducting energy audits of equipment and developing innovative waste management programs. Diners will have the opportunity to calculate and reduce the carbon footprint of their own food choices[7].
[edit] Awards
- Seafood Choices Alliance – 2007
- Fedele Bauccio Honored as Seafood Champion [10]
- Ecological Society of America – 2005
- Corporate Award for Ethical Business Practices [11]
- The Humane Society of the United States - 2005
- Praises commitment to cage-free eggs[12]
- Princeton Review – Multiple years
- #1 College Food Service in the Country [13]
- SAMCEDA – 2006
- Award of Excellence for Service to the Community[14]
[edit] Partial listing of clients
[edit] Corporate Food Service
Adidas America
Best Buy
Cisco
DreamWorks, SKG
eBay
Intel Corporation
Medtronic
Nordstrom, Inc.
Oracle Corporation
Palm, Inc.
Target Corporation
Yahoo!
Payless Shoesource
[edit] Education Food Service
American University
Biola University
Case Western Reserve University
The College of Idaho
Duke University
Dominican University of California
Goucher College
Grove City College
Hamilton College
Lewis & Clark College
Macalester College
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Northwestern College
Oberlin College
Reed College
St. Olaf College
University of Portland
University of Redlands
University of San Francisco
Wabash College
Washington University in St. Louis
Wesleyan University
Whitman College
Woodbury University
[edit] Specialty Venues
Acme Chophouse
The Art Institute of Chicago
AT&T Park (Home of the San Francisco Giants)
deYoung Museum
The Getty Center and Villa
Guthrie Theater
Legion of Honor
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Minnesota History Center
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
Seattle Art Museum
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ a b Bon Appétit Management Company Press Room. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Maisie Ganzler of an eco-friendly catering company answers Grist's questions. www.grist.org. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ a b Courtenay, Erin. "Today's Eco-Event: "Eat Local Challenge"", TreeHugger, 2005-04-29.
- ^ The Save Seafood Roadshow... Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ Food Service Giant Unveils Sustainable-Seafood Purchase Policy (2006-02-21). Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ a b Peterson, Kristina. "Local Food Company Has Beef With Antiobiotics", Palo Alto Daily News, 2007-03-26. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ a b Peterson, Kristina. "Campaign aims to cut emissions:'Low-carbon diet' hopes to take bite out of greenhouse gases", Palo Alto Daily News, 2007-04-21. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ Borque, Haven. "Growth of Fair Trade Certification shows more people care about where their food comes from", Cooperative Grocer, July - August 2005. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ Eshel, Gidon & Martin, Pamela (May), Diet, Energy and Global Warming, <http://geosci.uchicago.edu/~gidon/papers/nutri/nutri3.pdf>. Retrieved on 31 December 2007
- ^ "Line Items", Seafood Business, March 2007, pp. 10. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ "Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America", pp. 212. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ Bon Appétit Management Co. Receives National Humane Award (2006-04-10). Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ "Two Bon Appetit accounts lay claim to best college campus food", Nation's Restaurant News, FindArticles.com, 2001-09-17. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
- ^ SAMCEDA - Awards of Excellence. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.

