how much chili?
I cooking chili for a school fundraiser, my award winning chili I might add, and I'm not sure how much to make.
The recipe I use is for 1.5 gallons. At the last contest I made 3 gallons which was gone in about 2.5 hours serving "tastings" for the peoples choice category (couple hundred). This event will be much larger, probably 3000. It'll be running 11am to 6pm. Anyone do events like this? any thoughts on amount would be great |
If that chili is the main entree you'll serve 150 gallons with nothing in reserve.
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Let’s see. A cup is 8 ounces and a bowl is 12ounces and 128 ounces per gallon
Tasting is how many ounces?? Number of people times ounces per person. Divide that number by 128 and get an approximate gallon amount. Then again I’ve been in the sun Cooking all day |
Wow, that sounds like an exciting, huge undertaking. If you figure a 12oz serving for 3000 people, you're looking at roughly 280 gallons of chili. I'd probably figure 300 gallons or so should be a safe number. I'm definitely no catering expert though
edit: 16Adams beat me on the math |
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Cost: My recipe is roughly $10/gallon to make...$3000 in this example. Time: My recipe takes roughly one hour per gallon to make in 3 gallon batches...300 hours in this example. Close to two weeks of prepping/cooking non-stop. Of course my numbers are for funsies based on 3 gallons at-a-time, neglecting economies of scale, and figuring one average 4-burner range to cook on. Still, that's a helluvalot of chili to volunteer to make :laugh: |
I love making chili......but not that much. I think i would never want to make chili ever again if i tried to make that much.
You might want to contact Hormel. |
So it's a fundraiser.....will you sell it by the cup? Will there be other vendors there? I am assuming everyone sells their item/s then money goes to the school?
Others posed a good question, is your chili the only food item being served and are they asking you to make enough for that many people or make how ever much you can afford to make and then sell till you run out? I've done many school fundraisers. Normally, a group of parents pitch in to buy something like burgers. Parents absorb the cost, time, etc and donate all the profit to the school. Sometimes, schools will deduct the cost of ingredients and pay people back at least for that. Most times, they don't. So parents, etc already know going in they are "donating" out of their own pockets a little bit too in order to help the school make more profit. Bob |
You are going to need to go to China Town to get some of their Giant stock pots. (I love looking at China Town restaurant supply stores! Heck, I love looking at any restaurant supply stores.)
But then, how in the world would you move 50 gallon pots of hot chili? An engine lift? Or a Hoyer Hoist? You got a turkey fryer, or a Boiler Pot? I got a Propane turkey fryer, but put a Natural Gas burner on it. That thing will boil the boogers out of 5 gallons of crab! I think I would make enough for 2,000. Then put up a sign saying SOLD OUT if I ran out. And you are going to need one of those flat carts for your supplies at Sam's Club or Costco. Lastly, I'm sure glad I'm not you. Check the local Party Rental Stores for big equipment. Get help. LOTS of HELP! :biggrin1: |
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I'm sure there are others providing food, so I hope the OP is off the hook.
On the Other hand, it would be fun to cook 100 gallons of chili. Just dump it in a huge, clean cooler, and ladle it out! |
I prefer Texas style chili with no noodles but if it were me and 3000 people were projected, I would add spaghetti noodles for volume and to cut cost.
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Sorry, never heard of noodles in chili???
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Grew up poor. My mom didn't have the money for lots of ground beef or diced chuck so she substituted spaghetti noodles. I've never researched it but I'm willing to bet that's where the noodles originated from. Probably Depression Era habits passed on.
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