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How airplane food goes from the kitchen to your flight

How airplane food goes from the kitchen to your flight

Inside Gate Gourmet, the airline catering company that makes up to 25,000 meals a day.

How airplane food gets to your seat

Gate Gourmet at Dulles International Airport caters 18,000 meals for passengers on 275 flights daily. That number can reach 25,000 meals in high season. 

More than 44,000 flights take off around the world every day, and many of those onboard are hungry. On shorter flights, these passengers may opt for a snack pack; on longer ones, they may get a full meal.

Preparing the latter is no small feat.

Gate Gourmet is one major player in the airplane catering game, feeding about 750 million passengers a year in about 60 countries. On a typical day at its Dulles International Airport branch, in suburban Washington, the company is responsible for getting 18,000 meals onto 275 flights. In busy seasons, that number jacks up to 25,000 meals.


A cook prepares the salmon in the hot kitchen at the Gate Gourmet food complex in Dulles, Va. (Gabriella Demczuk for The Washington Post)

Annually, that means Gate Gourmet IAD (as it’s known, using the airport’s code) alone goes through 84,000 Coca-Colas, 100,000 yogurt cups and 1,300,000 pounds of ice.

“We’re open 24 hours, seven days a week,” said Gate Gourmet IAD general manager Jim Stathakes (whose preferred airplane meal option is chicken).


Thinh Thi dices melons at Gate Gourmet. (Gabriella Demczuk for The Washington Post)

Each in-flight meal has to be timed perfectly in a 24-hour window to match its corresponding flight. Produce (usually items you can get year-round, like pineapple) is delivered for just-in-time freshness. Food must be cooked and then blast-chilled, its temperature brought down for safety reasons. Employees must have your meal ready four hours before a flight departs and delivered onto the plane no later than one hour before boarding starts.

“We want to make sure we have the right food for the destination,” said Harribey, who attended culinary school in Bordeaux, France. “When you sit in the plane, that’s your first step in getting to your destination.”

If you’re flying from Tokyo, for example, pork with ginger garlic soy sauce and rice is fitting. A baguette with your meal, meanwhile, sets the tone for a journey to Paris.


A dish prepared for first class at the Gate Gourmet food complex. (Gabriella Demczuk for The Washington Post)

But there’s one more consideration, too: How we eat in the sky isn’t the same as how we eat on Earth.

“We know that up in the air at 36,000 feet, our taste buds are different,” Harribey said. “We don’t [taste] as much salt because the air is drier within the aircraft.”

To overcome that biological quirk, Harribey adds a little more salt to dishes, along with herbs and spices to enhance flavors further.

You don’t get all that with the snack pack.

source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/travel/2019/10/30/how-airplane-food-goes-kitchen-your-flight/


© 2019 US Food Safety Corporation. No copyright claim is made for portions of this blog and linked items that are works of the United States Government, state governments or third parties.



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