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hungryhippo
9th Aug 2008, 07:16
Hi all.

This may be a touchy subject but would anyone care to shed light on what they believe makes for good crew meals. I have been asked to research such a topic for an airline and would greatly appreciate any info or experiences you have to offer.

Cheers

Speedbrake Lever
9th Aug 2008, 09:03
Well kinda depends on how long the sectors are

but really a choice of soups and plenty of sandwiches

would be nice

also easiest and it would get eaten

god knows how much crew food is binned every day

S.L.

fractional
9th Aug 2008, 10:14
god knows how much crew food is binned every day
Touchy subject. Crew do need to be nourished while on duty, but a lot of food is wasted for different reasons. In-flight catering isn't cheap and airlines would welcome cutting here too. Difficult consensus.

Sal-e
9th Aug 2008, 13:24
I think GF has the best crew meal, usually in the form of a two or three course meal. But I'm afraid those days are numbered as BAS' catering is extremely expensive.

magicmorris
9th Aug 2008, 13:43
Its not just the crew meals at EK that are missing the protien! The passenger meals, not have alot more rice and veg and alot less meat!

Cost cutting all round!

mutt
9th Aug 2008, 14:53
Cheese board, sandwich plate, arabic coffee and dates, selection from first class menu prior to passengers, ability to pre-order special meal selections 24 hour in advance.............. :):)

Mutt

fractional
9th Aug 2008, 15:09
Without being pedantic, crews should have the choice to order their meals from a selected few from their own personal profiles where these meal contents should be loaded in consultation with the companies' nutrition specialists. I know this is far, far away for many "managers" and many of you think I'm from the outer space.

shazar
9th Aug 2008, 21:51
This is an interesting thread for me. I have a strong knack for healthy foods for more than 6 years and when I ever talk about it, I seem to go longer than usual.

Mr Fractional .. I agree with you and I don't think you are from the outer space. For instance, if one is traveling overnight lengthy flight from a GCC capital to a European capital like London or Paris, I would certainly recommend date, fruit, salad and a small portion of protein with little vegetables but omit all grains like bread, rice (especially refined white ones), potatoes, eggplant, spaghetti, ..etc

Grains cause a major increase in insulin level, especially in late night hours, and cause pancreas to release insulin abnormally while sleeping. Once insulin level drops in the blood, people would wake up, mostly in bad mood and perhaps behave insanely and complain about everything for no reason. Even doctors advise to avoid grains in the dinner. We often experience this with friends and relatives who sometimes wake up fighting first thing in the morning or having headache following a short nap after lunch. When a menu is established for lengthy night flights without any grains, the passengers would sleep continuously because serotonin enzyme source is included. This make passengers sleep deeply and without interest for next meal. They would wake up normal, leave the plane happy and smile all the time. Thus, the company achieved less cost and saved meals left by hundreds of passengers, part from the noise of some passengers.

Coffee sometimes is good for lengthy night flights to attend to lag time and adjust biological hour.

I read this from a famous American doctor and watched before on a TV show.

Perhaps a note to add. Most airlines and hotels tend to offer tiny packets of sugar and salt using aspartame in place of sugar (though sugar is bad too) and artificial salt instead of natural sea salt. Both look presentable, but dangerous enough to cause several health problems on long term.

But anyhow, I agree with Mr Fractional that a specialist advice is far better. A final product must meet many objectives concerned with the cost, quality and benefit.

Thank you for the thread.

411A
9th Aug 2008, 22:34
A few months ago in JED, the catering supervisor asked what we wanted.
Most of the CC wanted chicken with rice...but as a meat/potato guy, I asked for a New York steak, medium rare, with a baked potato.

Thirty minutes later it shows up, just as requested.
Ummm, good!
We always get a good selection of sandwiches as well.
The breakfasts ex-JED can be very good, also.
No 'green' eggs, fortunately.

Mogas
10th Aug 2008, 04:11
A little of topic but since we are talking about crew meals I might as well ask. I heard that some of the airlines in Europe allow the flight crew to have a glass of wine with their meals. Is that true?

BigGeordie
10th Aug 2008, 06:54
I believe Air France used to allow a (small) glass of wine with a meal but that was a long, long time ago.

gulfboy
10th Aug 2008, 07:17
Gulf Air's crew meals out of Bahrain have been virtually the SAME for the past 5 years. Greasy rice with various protein bits in it, "Indian style" vegetarian curry (that makes you fart beautifully), overcooket fettucini with -bizzarely- sweet-and-sour vegetable-something.
Hardly any bread is provided for crew.
Sandwiches on the other hand are usually a dig, soft (and of course sugar loaded) hunk of white bread roll with minescule filling. Again, the same selection for the past 5 years.
Crew, from the drivers to the most junior FA, are constantly asking for SOUP and salad from F-class.
Management take note! Surely a few jugs of soup are the easiest and cheapest meal to provide!!

Out of stations such as FRA, CDG, LHR, BKK, MNL etc we get to select from a 9-item menu. The wish-list gets handed to the catering guys on arrival and will be hopefully provided on the way home.
Recently, 12 out of 13 crew choose the same item. Fortunately someone in catering had the good sense to put the foot down and change a few orders. Imagine there was something wrong with the food. The entire crew would have been down and out.

As for buying your own meals, I think that Lufthansa lets their crew purchase/place orders on-line for their crew meals. Nice, big meals for a few Euros. I don't know if this is still going on, but they seemed to be happy.

Metro man
10th Aug 2008, 12:29
Fly for a low cost operator and you get to bring your own meals from home. Exactly what you want and you know what's gone into it and how it's been prepared. Provided it is transported and stored correctly (good insulated containers, not for too long), it's sounding like a better option than what's being described here. ;)

Reimers
10th Aug 2008, 14:53
At Lufthansa, we do indeed get to order crew meals, and this can be done online or by calling on the catering frequency. These meals cost around €5,- and the quality varies from one station to the next. Unfortunately, FRA and MUC are the worst. HAM is much better. The price is deducted from the daily allowance. There are only around 8 main corses to choose from, so I tend to bring my own as often as i can, and use the crew meal service on those days that I can't manage to obtain something on my own (stand-by duty, sundays).

fractional
10th Aug 2008, 15:12
Home cooking is only good on the first day or if you come home everyday, otherwise you've got to live with the outside meals.
Companies have got to be sensible and sensitive if they want crews to pay for their meals. Every case is different. I accept few options, but long-haul don't have a choice except on your first day of the flying. MANAGERS (yes with capital letters) lay out good practices where the vast majority usually do not have a problem with and take it well leaving behind the expected moaners.

metro301
11th Aug 2008, 01:11
Mutt,

Cheese board, sandwich plate, arabic coffee and dates, selection from first class menu prior to passengers, ability to pre-order special meal selections 24 hour in advance..............

Mutt
9th August 2008 13:43

Don't forget first crack at the dessert trays too......

sabino
11th Aug 2008, 20:28
metro check your PM, please.

cheers

Panama Jack
12th Aug 2008, 03:20
Reimers: HAM is much better. Oh, we don't get to do that here in the Middle East :} :E

Have to agree with El Peligroso. A sandwich is NOT a meal. I occasionally enjoy a Subway (from the exact-name chain-- substitutes not accepted) on brown or honey-oat for a lunch bite, but anything else is unacceptable, especially the "sponges" that I have seen on our airplanes.

Also have to agree with Sal-e about GF crew meals-- they normally provide a variety of chicken, beef, fish, vegitarian, and probably something else, so I can normally find a few favorable options for my palate.

My major concern with crew meals is their healthfulness. When I fly full-fare PAX I normally opt for low-sodium. As a passenger, I really enjoy Lufthansa's low-sodium meals-- they are extremely tasty as they are flavored with herbs and spices, and I like the fact that they are also probably low in the other "sodiums" such as Sodium Benzoate, Monosodium Glutimate (that seems to be disturbingly common in German prepared food) as well as the common salt. If all else fails, the salt packet is right next to the knife & fork. ;)

Furthermore, when doing "red-eyes", I like to stay low on carbohydrates. Yes, I know I am up all night but fear my metabolism may still be on local time zones. So I pick out the proteins (meats and vegis) and avoid the rice and potatos (although I sometimes have a few spoonfuls of desert to take the edge of the meal at the end). So the Biryanis are out.

kingoftheslipstream
13th Aug 2008, 08:07
EK have instated a new policy of havin' crew meals available for flight deck so we don't have to wait to see what might be left over from the pax meals. I like this system, as it allows me to eat at my regular body clock meal time (or significantly closer to it). The quality has been good overall and I like the convenience and time from a practical point of view. Occasionally I wait, or supplement the crew meal with something from the pax service if it's available. One kinda gets the best of both worlds!:)

Terri Wrist
13th Aug 2008, 10:04
I think I turning Qat-ar-i
I think I turning Qat-ar-i
I really think so......

No Nuts, no dates, no juice, no labaan,
No buscuit, no desert, no chockies, no cappa,
It's dark......

And did you know that it is safety hazard for pilot to eat something during passenger boarding? My chief say it is so, he very wise :yuk: Is your airline safe too??

I look forward to first airline that have KFC catering contract.

brassplate
13th Aug 2008, 12:56
wtf? we moaning about food now?!?!

fatigueflyer
15th Aug 2008, 10:16
To those knocking EK crew meals.....you guys just don't know what you have until you go somewhere else and get the same brown paper bag with the same contents year after year!! Rather than trying to order crew meals in advance or whinging about the on board catering then eating it anyway, get your maids or missus to make you up a meal or two. Better still, do it yourself!! :rolleyes: