Beef Checkoff Partners Reach Culinary Influencers

The beef industry was able to make tremendous impact on more than 450 culinary students, chef instructors and restaurant operators at the 2015 Northeast and Southeast American Culinary Federation (ACF) Conference in Baltimore on Feb. 15-17, thanks to a gold sponsorship from the checkoff's Northeast Beef Promotion Initiative, in coordination with the Virginia, Pennsylvania, Maryland and North Carolina beef councils, and the North American Meat Institute.

Participants in a “Meet the Farmer” Twitter party on Sunday, Feb. 15 followed the #ChefConnect hashtag to join the conversation. Local cattle farmers and various checkoff organizations participated in the dialogue, which created about 200,000 impressions on Twitter.

At the expo breakout booths on Feb. 16, conference participants met local cattle farmers for a deeper question-and-answer session. Mike Brannon, vice president of Old Line Custom Meat Company and cattleman, as well as Dr. Scott Barao, executive director of the Jorgensen Family Foundation and the Maryland Beef Council and manager of the Angus herd at Hedge Apple Farms in Buckeystown, Md. engaged with the foodservice professionals.

"The Twitter party was a unique and exciting opportunity to engage chefs and other food professionals in a real-time discussion about beef and how it makes its way from pasture to plate," Barao said. "Many questions were answered and many myths about beef were 'busted' in the span of one short hour.

"My time at the ACF conference in Baltimore was fruitful," he continued. "It allowed me to speak face-to-face with many of the fine chefs that make beef the center of their menus and who were grateful for the opportunity to interact with some of the folks that actually produce the product they hold in high regard."

The checkoff also hosted three educational sessions:  “Power up your Menu with Beef” was presented by checkoff Executive Chef Dave Zino, who demonstrated the added value and versatility of middle meats and outlined opportunities for foodservice operators to enhance their menus with mainstay steaks.

During the “Discover Veal” session, Chef Dan D’Angelo, CEC, AAC, culinary instructor at the Philadelphia Art Institute and president of the Philadelphia ACF Chapter, demonstrated three of the checkoff's new veal foodservice recipes developed by the checkoff.  “I promoted veal in a different way other than classic veal dishes, such as the veal saltimbocca plated to a slider and also changed a BLT to a VLT made with veal," D'Angelo said.

Chef Chris Edwards, Chef de Cuisine, presented the final session, “Savor the Synergy of Pairing Beef & Wine” at the Salamander Resort in Middlebury, Va. Three beef dishes were paired with three local wines, donated by the Virginia Wine Board, during which participants also tasted and sampled each pairing.

For more information about your beef checkoff investment, visit MyBeefCheckoff.com.

UNDERSTANDING THE BEEF CHECKOFF PROGRAM

The Beef Checkoff Program was established as part of the 1985 Farm Bill. The checkoff assesses $1 per head on the sale of live domestic and imported cattle, in addition to a comparable assessment on imported beef and beef products. States may retain up to 50 cents on the dollar and forward the other 50 cents per head to the Cattlemen's Beef Promotion and Research Board, which administers the national checkoff program, subject to USDA approval.

www.mybeefcheckoff.com

Source: The Beef Checkoff Program