A math resource for foodservice professionals covers such topics as calculating yield percent, determining portion costs, changing recipe yields, and converting between metric and U.S. measures.
Written by two former instructors at The Culinary Institute of America, this revised and updated guide is an indispensable math resource for foodservice professionals everywhere. Covering topics such as calculating yield percent, determining portion costs, changing recipe yields, and converting between metric and U.S. measures, it offers a review of math basics, easy-to-follow lessons, detailed examples, and newly revised practice problems in every chapter.
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Chapter 2: Customary Units of Measure. |
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Chapter 3: Metric Measures. |
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Chapter 4: Conversion of Units of Measure within Volume or Weight. |
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Chapter 5: Converting Weight or Volume Mixed Measures. |
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Chapter 6: Advanced Conversions between Weight and Volume. |
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Chapter 7: Yield Percent. |
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Chapter 8: Applying Yield Percent in the Kitchen. |
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Chapter 10: Edible Portion Cost. |
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Chapter 11: Recipe Costing. |
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Chapter 12: Yield Percent: When to Ignore it. |
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Chapter 13: Beverage Costing. |
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Chapter 14: Receipt Size Conversion. |
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Chapter 15: Kitchen Ratios. |
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Appendix A: Formula Reference Review. |
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Appendix B: Units of Measure and Equivalency Charts. |
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Appendix C: Approximate Volume to Weight Chart and Approximate Yield of Fruits and Vegetables Chart. |
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Appendix E: Blank Food Cost Form. |
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Culinary Math Glossary of Terms. |
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Linda Blocker taught middle and high school mathematics for ten years before joining the faculty of The Culinary Institute of America. During her three years at the CIA, she taught culinary math. She spent many years involved in her family's gourmet food business, Meredith Mountain Farms. Julia Hill taught cost control and culinary math at The Culinary Institute of America for fifteen years. Prior to her teaching position at the CIA, she was a public accountant and restaurant manager. Founded in 1946, The Culinary Institute of America is an independent, not-for-profit college offering bachelor's and associate degrees in culinary arts and baking and pastry arts. A network of more than 37,000 alumni in foodservice and hospitality has helped the CIA earn its reputation as the world's premier culinary college. Courses for foodservice professionals are offered at the college's main campus in Hyde Park, New York, and at The Culinary Institute of America at Greystone, in St. Helena, California. Greystone also offers baking and pastry, advanced culinary arts, and wine certifications.