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A la Carte Foods: Best Practices

Learn about competitive foods, rules and regulations, types of food items to sell, benefits of selling a la carte items, and pricing strategies. Explore resources and guidelines for selling a la carte and competitive foods.

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A la Carte Foods: Best Practices

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  1. A la Carte Foods: Best Practices Natalie Bryslan, BS

  2. Where do I start? • What are competitive foods? • What are the rules and regulations that I need to follow? • What types of food items should I be selling? • What are the benefits of selling a la carte food items? • How should I be pricing my a la carte food items? • Resources Overview

  3. Check to see what your district’s wellness policy allows when it comes to a la carte and competitive foods • Determine what items would sell well among your student population • Make sure the items you are selling meet state and federal guidelines • Focus on healthier food options • Pricing your a la carte items Where to start

  4. According to the Colorado Competitive Food Service Policy (2202-R-201.00) competitive food service is any food or beverage sold to students that is separate from the district’s nonprofit, federally reimbursed food service program, and is provided by a school-approved organization or by a school-approved outside vendor. • Competitive foods cannot be sold in competition with the district’s food service program. This means they cannot be sold 30 minutes before and 30 minutes after each scheduled meal service on any area of the school campus that is accessible to students. What are completive foods?

  5. The Colorado Healthy Beverage Policy has been aligned with the federal Smart Snacks Policy • Allowable beverages include: • Plain or carbonated water • Low-fat Milk (1%) • Non-fat Milk • 100% fruit or vegetable juice • 100% fruit or vegetable juice diluted with water • Size allowances vary with school level (see next slides) Colorado Healthy Beverage Policy

  6. 8 oz. portions of fruit and vegetable juice (must be 100%) • No added sweeteners • < 120 calories per 8 oz. portion • 8 oz. portions of milk (must be 1%) • <150 calories per 8 oz. portion • Non-dairy milk must be nutritionally equivalent to milk per USDA guidelines • Bottled Water: Plain or Carbonated Allowable Beverages for Elementary

  7. 10 oz. portions of fruit and vegetable juice (must be 100%) • No added sweeteners • < 120 calories per 8 oz. portion • 10 oz. portions of milk (must be 1%) • <150 calories per 8 oz. portion • Non-dairy milk must be nutritionally equivalent to milk per USDA guidelines • Bottled Water: Plain or Carbonated Middle School Allowable Beverages

  8. 12 oz. portions of fruit and vegetable juice (must be 100%) • No added sweeteners • < 120 calories per 8 oz. portion • 12 oz. portions of milk (must be 1%) • <150 calories per 8 oz. portion • Non-dairy milk must be nutritionally equivalent to milk per USDA guidelines • Bottled Water: Plain or Carbonated High School Allowable Beverages

  9. Other beverages (i.e. unsweetened or diet teas, low calorie sport drinks, fitness waters, flavored waters, seltzers and coffees) • Other flavored and/or carbonated beverages that are < 20 ounces must: • Contain < 5 calories per 8 ounces or < 10 calories per 20 ounces • Other flavored and/or carbonated beverages that are < 12 ounces must: • Contain < 40 calories per 8 ounces or < 60 calories per 12 ounces • Diet soda is prohibited • Caffeinated beverages are allowed • At least 50% of non-milk beverage options must be water and no or low-calorie options High School Allowable Beverages

  10. Recent USDA FNS updates state that when evaluating coffee beverages, the calories added by any ingredients that are not allowable beverages must be monitored such that the calories from those ingredients do not exceed the low calorie beverage standard of 5 calories per ounce of beverage. • Fat-free milk, flavored and unflavored and 1% unflavored milk are allowable beverages that may be combined with coffee; therefore, the calories from these allowable milk types are not counted when added to coffee beverages. • However, when flavoring is used in coffee beverages where 1% milk is included, then the entire beverage is to be evaluated against the low calorie beverage standard since flavored 1% milk is not an allowable beverage. Coffee Beverages

  11. Whole-grain rich products; or • First ingredient is a fruit, vegetable, dairy product, or protein food; or • Be a combination food that contains at least ¼ cup fruit and/or vegetable; or • Contain 10% of the Daily Value (DV) of nutrients for calcium, potassium, vitamin D, or dietary fiber • Any food must also meet nutrition requirements • Calories, sodium, total fat, saturated fat, trans fat, and sugar Smart snacks in schools

  12. Bottled water • Low fat/fat-free milk • 100% fruit juice • Unsweetened iced tea • Coconut water • Fresh or squeezable fruit • Single-serve fruit bowls • Dried fruit, 100% fruit leather • Granola or natural snack bars • Whole grain crackers • Popcorn • Baked Chips • Nuts, trail mix • Fresh veggies with dip • Frozen 100% fruit bars • Low fat string cheese • Low fat/fat-free yogurt What food items should I be selling?

  13. Gives schools the opportunity to send consistent, positive health messages by offering nutritious choices that comply with USDA standards • The program includes specific criteria that can be used as a guide for efforts to create a healthier school food culture • It’s a great way to bring money back into your food service program • You can convince school and community members that concessions and competitive foods will continue to make money and students will be consuming healthier food and drink options Benefits of selling a la carte items

  14. Price healthy items cheaper than less healthy options • Prices need to be set at a sufficient level to cover all costs • Rounding to the nearest cent is a common practice • The CDE Office of School Nutrition recommends a mark-up of 40% Pricing a la carte items

  15. You want to start selling Baked Hot Cheetos on your a la carte line. One case costs $31.47 and comes with 104 bags per case. • What should you sell each bag of Cheetos for? Pricing: Example

  16. First you want to figure your cost per serving: • Total case cost ÷ Total # of servings • $31.47 ÷ 104 = $0.30 • Next, take your cost per serving and divide that by your mark-up percentage (40%) • $0.30 ÷ .4 = $0.75 • You would want to sell your Cheetos for $0.75 per bag Pricing: Answer

  17. Smart Snack Calculator • https://foodplanner.healthiergeneration.org/calculator/ • Nonprogram Revenue Tools • http://www.cde.state.co.us/nutrition/fianancialnonprogramrevenue • Smart Snacks and Competitive Foods • http://www.cde.state.co.us/nutrition/nutricompetitivefoods • https://www.fns.usda.gov/school-meals/tools-schools-focusing-smart-snacks Resources

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