Abstract

PurposeThis paper addresses the trade-off between asset investment and food safety in the design of a food catering production plant. It analyses the relationship between the quality decay of cook-warm products, the logistics of the processes and the economic investment in production machines.Design/methodology/approachA weekly cook-warm production plan has been monitored on-field using temperature sensors to estimate the quality decay profile of each product. A multi-objective optimisation model is proposed to (1) minimise the number of resources necessary to perform cooking and packing operations or (2) to maximise the food quality of the products. A metaheuristic simulated annealing algorithm is introduced to solve the model and to identify the Pareto frontier of the problem.FindingsThe packaging buffers are identified as the bottleneck of the processes. The outcome of the algorithms highlights that a small investment to design bigger buffers results in a significant increase in the quality with a smaller food loss.Practical implicationsThis study models the production tasks of a food catering facility to evaluate their criticality from a food safety perspective. It investigates the tradeoff between the investment cost of resources processing critical tasks and food safety of finished products.Social implicationsThe methodology applies to the design of cook-warm production. Catering companies use cook-warm production to serve school, hospitals and companies. For this reason, the application of this methodology leads to the improvement of the quality of daily meals for a large number of people.Originality/valueThe paper introduces a new multi-objective function (asset investment vs food quality) proposing an original metaheuristic to address this tradeoff in the food catering industry. Also, the methodology is applied and validated in the design of a new food production facility.

Highlights

  • IntroductionEmployees at work, and patients in hospitals demand ready-to-eat meals

  • Students at school, employees at work, and patients in hospitals demand ready-to-eat meals

  • This paper aims at investigating the trade-off between the infrastructural investment in production resources and the increase of safety of food products throughout the production system in the food service industry

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Summary

Introduction

Employees at work, and patients in hospitals demand ready-to-eat meals. Food service companies are responsible for supplying meals to schools, hospitals and private companies which are not capable of producing and providing food on their own (Mahalik and Nambiar, 2010). This industry counts about 60.000 companies employing one million people in Europe (Sj€ogren et al, 2015). The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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