How We Get Our Recipes

Food and dining with dignity is in our mission. We cook and prepare food for our patrons as if we were preparing the food for our own families, for our best friends, for our employers. We believe our patrons deserve the work, creativity and patience put into any other meal we would serve to anyone else. We refuse to put anything on a plate just because we have the ingredients. We look at our ingredients and then think about what we can add to make a dish special. Sometimes we look at the ingredients and say, “we refuse to make the same old dish, what can we make instead?” We also pay attention to the feedback our patrons give us on certain dishes. If there is great feedback on a certain dish, be prepared to see it again in the future. If there is a certain amount of negative feedback, we will scrap that recipe. The steps in creating a recipe or obtaining a recipe for a meal distribution contain a few steps including surveying ingredients, finding recipes, adjusting recipes, and finally, getting creative with recipes!

We must look at our ingredients on hand. As we look at the ingredients we have on hand, we get an idea of the types of meals we can serve for the week. We obtain these ingredients through donations, grants, low cost or free from the Food Bank, or purchasing from other vendors. We try to rotate proteins we use each week so that we do not serve the same protein too many times in a row. So far, we have been able to do this with success.

The second step is to think of a dish or find a recipe that contains those ingredients.  Sometimes a dish will easily pop into mind, other times one of us will do a Google search. I have found that the Google search, “Simple upscale recipe for large event” will do. I then find a recipe that contains the ingredients at hand and then go purchase the remaining ingredients. Yes, sometimes it is just that easy, but other times it is not.

Sometimes we must get creative with a recipe. We get a lot of donated produce. It’s healthy, fresh and tastes great. We will put it in sauces, meats, salads or whatever and wherever we can. We hate to see food get wasted, especially fresh produce. Sometimes the creativity is necessary to make a plain meal a more upscale meal. An example of this is going from chicken salad to curried chicken salad with grapes and walnuts or pecans.

The most fun part, note sarcasm, is converting a recipe intended to serve 4-8 to a recipe to serve 150-160. It is not just a matter of just doing some multiplication. It is also a matter of conversion. Teaspoons are converted to cups and cups are converted to quarts or gallons. Free internet tools are a wonderful thing, but this all still takes a lot of time.

When the Auburn Hunger Task Force, Inc. dedicated itself to providing meals with dignity to patrons we dedicated ourselves to working hard for the patrons of the meal distributions. The patrons receive the same food we would serve to anyone else in our lives because they deserve it!

OPEN

The kitchen is open!

We are located in Auburn, NY and are open on Mondays and Tuesdays from noon – 1pm to give out nutritious and delicious meals to the public. If you are in need of a meal come to the parking lot of the SK Post at 168 State St. Enter the parking lot on Seymour St. where the army tank is located. Meals are always free and anyone is welcome.

Due to COVID-19 there are many precautions. We are only serving meals packed to go at this time. We do not know when this will change.

We have been able to serve 4,353 meals to people so far this year. This number will only rise exponentially because we will be adding more programs to our organization. Be on the lookout for news about our upcoming program Soup Wheels!

As always we appreciate the support we have received from the community. It is because of your support that we are able to provide this service to the community. Food security is possible one meal at a time.

Rotating Soup Kitchen Schedule

FREE MEALS are currently available at many different locations in Auburn, depending upon the day of the week. One of our goals at Auburn Hunger Task Force is to simplify this process by establishing a single soup kitchen where every meal will be served. Until that time, please use the following guide to find your daily meal:

MONDAY LUNCH: Go to Calvary Food Pantry at 90 Franklin Street from 11:00-12:30. We offer a bagged lunch to-go.

TUESDAY LUNCH: Go to Holy Family at 85 North Street from 10:00-11:00. We offer a bagged lunch to-go.

TUESDAY DINNER: Go to Knights of Columbus at 47 Market Street from 4:00-6:00pm. We offer a dine-in dinner. *NOTE: This location will only be open until April 30th.

WEDNESDAY LUNCH: Go to SS Peter & John’s Episcopal Church at 169 Genesee Street from 12:00-1:00. We offer a dine-in lunch.

THURSDAY LUNCH: Go to The Salvation Army at 18 East Genesee Street from 12:00-1:00. We offer a dine-in lunch.

FRIDAY LUNCH: Go to The Salvation Army at 18 East Genesee Street from 12:00-1:00. We offer a dine-in lunch.

SATURDAY LUNCH: Go to SS Peter & John’s Episcopal Church at 169 Genesee Street from 12:00-1:00. We offer a dine-in lunch.

SUNDAY DINNER: Go to The Salvation Army at 18 East Genesee Street from 3:30-4:30. We offer a dine-in dinner.