Over the last five years in the UK, Mexican restaurants are opening at a faster than any kind of restaurant, with an average of 57% outlet growth per year. Burritos are big business, and if this is a food phenomenon you haven't yet got wrapped up, you need to chimi-change your menus, and quickly!
We're not sure there's a cooler sounding book than "The Book of Mexicanisms". It's in the 1895 publication that The Burrito made its first entry, being defined as "a rolled Tortilla with meat and other ingredients inside". Burrito translates literally as "little donkey" - and the most popular theory being that it's so named as street vendors used a donkey to get around the villages of Northern Mexico, where it originated.
The El Cholo Spanish café was the first American menu to feature our Mexican friend during the 1930s, and later that decade Burritos made their American literary debut, by appearing in The Mexican Cookbook, authored by an historian and great traveller of Mexico. It was in the late 1950's, before The Burrito was first mentioned in the Los Angeles Times, and the Oxford English Dictionary - both in the same year.
For the first seventy years of its life, The Burrito was a simple little thing, just beans, rice and meat. Then in the early 1960s, it got San Fransisco-ed - hard. A small, simple meal was made bigger, messier, cheesier, tastier, fuller. BETTER!
The Latin quarter of San-Fran introduced bigger wraps, brought flavours to life with the inclusion of cheese, tomato salsa, soured cream, jalapenos and lettuce - thus transforming our old friend The Little Donkey, into a fiery, culinary unicorn bursting with flavour. From humble beginnings, The Burrito began to take over the world.
Big, tasty and cheap - The Mission Burrito's growth in popularity in the 60's and 70's was exponential. It had gone from a small meaty snack to a portable meal, that is now more popular than ever. American chain Chipotle sell over 1.5m burritos daily. Every. Single. Day.
While the Mission-style burrito is rightfully going to be a staple on menus up and down the country; it's known and loved by people of all ages and palates. The Shoreditch hipsters have been chowing down on burrito inspired fusion for the last few years, and we're big fans. The most popular fusion is the Indian burrito (curry-to, anyone?), and it's not hard to see why - sloppy, filling, customisable and healthy - it's a natural, if long lost cousin to the Mexican.
Other fusion possibilities about ready to explode onto the market include Chinese (rice noodles, bean-sprouts, hoi-sin pulled duck), Katsu (breaded chicken, rice, katsu sauce), Rendang (Malaysian/Indonesian chicken stew with rice) - keep your eyes peeled for an announcement soon!
At Love Joes, our customers have consistently asked us to achieve three things: Healthy, British sourced food; On trend, great tasting menu solutions; excellent value for money. The Burrito ticks all of those boxes and more - it's a great grab 'n' go option that has been flying out of our kitchens, with almost a quarter of a million portions of our Mexican/fusion burrito sold last year. With burritos becoming more and more visible on the high street, we're proud to give you a simple to cook, great tasting product that puts your menus bang on trend. Together, we'll keep Britain burritoing!
Our exhibitions this year took a very scientific turn as we decided to take an explorative journey of tastes, sensations and perceptions. We created a range of marinades designed to trigger the five taste receptors on the tongue: sweet, sour, salty, bitter and umami. Each marinated piece of chicken was accompanied by an equally tasty side dish as we proceeded to ask our customers "what's your flavour?"
The menu was designed to push some boundaries and raise some eyebrows whilst tickling taste buds to the max. All of the flavours, including chocolate and chilli, were well received but there was one in particular that stood out from the crowd.
Moroccan citrus offers an aromatically spiced flavour with zesty orange and lemon. The complexity of the spice, coupled with the freshness of citrus is a winning combination and after listening to your feedback at LACA and TUCO we have launched it across a range of cuts for a limited time only!!
Our most recent product launch has seen innovation and provenance combine to create a range of products that are both on trend and are of the highest quality. With no other British coated chicken products on the market, we decided that we were the company to fill that gap. We have kicked off with a breaded bite and a crunchy goujon, with a hot fillet coming to join the trio in the coming weeks.
The products lend themselves to a variety of uses but primarily allow caterers to re-create a high street style, coated chicken offer, safe in the knowledge that the chicken has been sourced from high welfare British farms. The provenance of poultry has become a focus point for many of our customers over the past few months and we have taken note. Our marinated chicken has been red tractor certified for a number of years so it seems only logical that we can provide a coated product that meets the same quality standards.
We are undeniably excited about the launch of these new product lines in time for British Food Fortnight, an annual, national celebration of British food and drink, so we decided to celebrate in style!
Our British themed incentive day went down a storm with staff and customers alike. With inspiration taken from the everyone's favourite baking show, our telesales team donned grey wigs and glasses in an office laden with union jack bunting and all things red, white and blue. The team all got behind the product to promote its benefits to our customers, winning prizes for their efforts throughout the day. They were also rewarded with afternoon tea and there was not a soggy bottom in sight!
Love Joes have launched an exclusive range of coated british chicken products. We have kicked off with a breaded bite and a crunchy goujon, with a hot fillet coming to join the trio in the coming weeks.
We are pleased to announce that we achieved the highest standard possible and have been accredited with an BRC AA grade.
Joe Koumi, director of Chicken Joes was delighted to receive the award for Greek business of the year 2015 on 11th June 2015.
Pupils love a good curry, according to Lisa Pigott, catering manager for Solihull Catering Services (SCC), which is responsible for school food provision at Langley School in Solihull.
However, with the different spice profiles of curries, getting the level of 'hotness' consistently right for pupils' palates, let alone having the time and skills to rustle them up daily, means that serving freshly-prepared curry in schools can be seen as too much of a challenge.
Already a firm fan of Love Joes chicken concepts, Lisa was, therefore, very interested when the supplier launched Love Curry two years ago.
Young customers can choose from plain or marinated chicken and 14 authentic sauces made with the finest spices including Korma, Balti, Madras, Vindaloo, Rogan Josh, Bhuna, Jalfrezi and Soya Balti, with sides including rice, naans, shish kebabs, vegetable samosa rolls and non-fried vegetable samosa and, new to the range, onion bhaji burger.
Preparing the curry is made easy as you just have to defrost the frozen chicken the day before, and reheat the sauce and chicken in a steamer on the day.
Each sauce is developed to either a vegetarian or vegan recipe, while school food-compliant Love Curry also carries the official Food For Life (FFL) catering mark as the official seal of approval when it comes to being nutritious and spot on in terms of traceability.
"Love Joes came in to do a promotion, giving out freebies, which we then sold on our grab and go bar that afternoon," said Lisa. "A huge hit, we now sell around 75 portions every day, serving it up in the Love Joes branded pots with rice and a mini naan bread for just £1.65."
The convenience of Love Curry also helps meet another of Langley School's key principles. "We are very conscious about queuing time and the need for students to make the most of their lunchtime without the need to spend most of their time waiting to be served," she said.
"Love Curry is incredibly easy to prepare and serve; you just pour the sauces out of the tubs, add the chicken and put it in the steamer. No hassle. The curries look nice and taste really lovely, and we have Love Joes boards up and use the branded pots, which are colourful and have a lot of visual appeal with the pupils. Students eat with their eyes, after all."
Love Curry comes in 2.5kg containers, chicken strips in 2.5kg packs, rice in 1kg or 3kg tubs and naans in boxes of 72, while branded cups come in batches of 25.
Copy specially prepared for EDUcatering, case study on Sidney Stringer Academy, Coventry
Standing like a shining beacon of hope in the St Michael's ward of Coventry, the second most deprived area of the city1 and situated within a diversely populated city, is the Sidney Stringer Academy, founded in 1973 by Alderman Sidney Stringer as the first urban community school in the country. Oozing grit and determination and a promise to deliver an outstanding education for its pupils, the pioneering school was ravaged by fire in 2007, destroying 40% of the school buildings, before rising like a phoenix from the ashes. Rebuilt at a cost of £29million, it reopened in 2012 with an official opening ceremony conducted by the Duke of York and in March 2013 the academy was judged to be outstanding on all accounts...
In a secondary school of 1,320 pupils, of which 90% take up school lunches and 36% receive free school meals, it is vital that the catering team get their breakfast and lunch offer right. The school does this by getting creative with its menu to ensure its pupils are engaged and educated when it comes to meal time, theme days playing a strong part.
Breakfast service is at 8am and pupils can expect to see muffins, toast and fruit pots on the menu. If it happens to be British Farmhouse Breakfast Week, a hearty bowl of porridge makes an appearance as well. A further break mid morning is in two sittings, 10.45am and 11.10am, with lunch also taken in two sittings, from 12.30-1.10pm and 1.30-2.10pm.
Pupils can dine in two ways, firstly in Cafe 71, a 'grab-and-go' outlet offering fresh sandwiches, baguettes, pizza and pasties, as well as baked chicken products from Love Joes.
Secondly, Restaurant 71 is the main restaurant, where the majority of pupils dine and which sees most of the action. It is in here that Ian Carroll, catering manager at Sidney Stringer Academy, whose catering is delivered by national independent contact caterer Catering Academy, gets most of his inspiration when devising his menu.
Ian is passionate about passing his love of food on to pupils and ensuring the menu echoes the seasons, where possible, as well as offering educational aids including posters about certain food types, so pupils learn about what they are eating. Ian even hosts fortnightly sessions with Year 7 pupils and their parents to talk about food and recreate healthy dishes.
Theme days are also held each month, with inspired menus full of great tasting and nutritious fresh food which are created by the experienced and innovative team at Catering Academy and passed to schools' catering managers. From here the catering managers draw up quality daily menus based on these themes.
"Theme days are always very popular with great feedback, and they fit in brilliantly with what I'm trying to achieve here at the school, giving me the opportunity to introduce healthy and nutritionally balanced food that some students may not have tasted before. For example, I've included star fruit on the menu before, it's an unfamiliar fruit and helps create conversation and stimulate curiosity about food.
"Ultimately, menus are designed to be fun and encourage those who would normally not have a school meal to try school lunches instead. I see lunchtime as not just for filling an empty stomach, it is a time to chat and develop social skills. By encouraging as many pupils as possible to take part in theme days more, we hope to increase uptake further."
Love Joes Pan Asian range, inspired by Japanese and oriental cuisine, lent itself perfectly to a Chinese New Year theme at the Sidney Stringer Academy, while tapping into demand for Asian food, which recorded a 24% rise in value sales between 2007-2011 to reach £1.4 billion, having grown by a solid 6.6% in 20112.
Bedecked in Chinese lanterns with free fortune cookies, Chinese prawn crackers and a lucky dip to win high street shopping vouchers up for grabs, all laid on by Love Joes, it really helped set the scene. "Love Joes offered to give out free samples of its new range to the students during lunch break," said Ian. "I knew this would be popular, but when they turned up with a Gok Wan look alike, who also happened to be a development chef for Love Joes, the pupils all wanted to have their 'selfie' with him as well. It's all about making food fun!"
"The focus is on creating fresh home-cooked food, supported by an authentic twist from our suppliers. I've seen uptake of school meals grow by 25 per cent in the past year, which is very positive, especially when my menu isn't always traditional and familiar - Love Joes is part of that. I always consult the school council, which is run by the pupils, on new food concepts I'm thinking of introducing and Love Joes obviously passed the bill, helping to really liven up the menu."
Love Joes' Japanese Style Chicken products in the new Pan Asian range include Chicken Karaage (approx. 23 pieces in 500g bag), Steamed Chicken Gyoza (approx. 28 pieces in 600g bag) and Chicken Roll (approx. 55 pieces in 1kg bag), which makes a great side dish.
With Love Joes Teriyaki Chicken, caterers can create everything from a traditional dish with rice to stir fries with noodles, and is also delicious in a steamed bun or on a flatbread. Each case of teriyaki chicken steak contains two 5kg bags (approx. 83 pieces).
While chicken is Love Joes' speciality, the new Pan Asian range also includes seafood concepts including Prawn Wanton Soup with Noodles (8 x 145g) and Prawn Ebi Fry (approx. 20 pieces in 700g bag), which go great with the Love Joes' Katsu curry sauce.
Completing the range is Love Joes Chicken Katsu, breaded chicken fillets (approx. 110 pieces per bag) with a Katsu curry sauce (2.5kg) and a choice of rice or paninette kiln fired flatbreads (approx. 100 pieces per bag), curries, salads and wraps being a few menu ideas.
A substantial proportion of Love Joes chicken is Red Tractor accredited, while Love Joes is also Food for Life certified, the catering mark showing your customers that the food you serve is freshly prepared and from trustworthy, traceable sources. Using Love Joes' freshly prepared chicken and marinades also helps you achieve your own Food for Life award.
Love Joes is also accredited by The British Retail Consortium (BRC), with its Gold Standard regarded as the benchmark for best practice in the food industry. For more information about Love Joes, call 01922 745500 or log onto www.lovejoes.co.uk
When students at Shelfield Community Academy near Walsall moved into their newly built school last September, they were thrilled to have a new school canteen known as The Mall and The Point and, within this, a counter dedicated to made-to-order wraps from Love Joes.
Complementing traditional meals and salads from the Bistro, Love Wrappin Joes is a healthy grab-and-go concept which makes ordering a wrap as much fun as eating it, holding huge appeal at the secondary school of 1,340 pupils, of which 900 take up school lunch.
Catering manager Tracy Maley said: "We now have bistro style tables inside and outside at one end of The Mall, and then half way down The Mall, we have the Love Joes counter. With so many students queuing for the wraps, we found we needed our own counter for it."
Overall, the school has been offering Love Joes wraps for about eight or nine years and they have grown so much in popularity during that time, kitchen staff have gone from using four bags of fresh chicken during one day's service to using nine to 10 bags a day.
"I would say the chicken wraps are one of our most popular dishes," said Tracy, who said they offered Love Joes chicken with a choice of Tikka, Tandoori and Mediterranean marinades, as well as occasionally Chinese and BBQ and then salad and choice of sauces. "Students can't get enough of the Mediterranean marinade. We do loads of that.
"Pupils would rather have a wrap than a sandwich, it's just a different culture and something different. It's also nice for them to have something that is hot, though we also do cold wraps, which go down fabulously as well with a bit of salad and yoghurt.
"I think it's lovely that the majority of the pupils have it with salad now, which ticks the box for a healthy option. Overall, I could not leave the wraps off the menu. It's a massive thing. We sell 100-plus a day so what would those pupils do if they weren't available?"
Love Wrappin Joes, which can be produced quickly, easily and replicated in large volumes, has been developed as a complete package, from ingredients to branding, and appeals across the board from picky eaters who know just what they like, to flavour fiends who want to make lunchtime an adventure. The three-step concept is simple:
Choose your filling: Pupils choose from a selection of succulent Love Joes chicken marinated with a choice of flavour
Choose your salad: Fresh salad is then added
Choose your sauce: Wrap is rounded off with one of eight Love Joes sauces
The kids also love the branding. While Tracy has opted to use her own non-branded boxes and packaging, she still places the Love Joes posters strategically around the school in order to increase take-up further. "I think now pupils like to know what they are eating," she said.
With around 900 pupils aged 3-18 at Newcastle-under-Lyme School in Staffordshire, the independent school's catering services team has its work cut out.
With new products added as often as possible - everything tested by the student council - and chicken being the most popular meat offering, it made sense at the start of the last academic year to install a branded food station from Love Joes in the main dining room.
"It has proved to be one of the most popular of our service options and, since it went in, uptake has increased termly," said Lesley catering services manager Lesley Byatt, who was then keen to try out the mini chicken skewers in Love Joes' new Street Eats range.
Creating succulent chicken without the need for washing up, it is the first chicken concept to be launched by Love Joes using the roastable bag concept, the cook-in-the-bag technology allowing cooking with simplicity, locking in flavour and minimising waste. Furthermore, the low skill cooking requirement also frees up caterers prep time and reduces cost.
The skewers, sourced from 100% British Farm Assured chicken, use a variety of Love Joes marinades to create flavours from around the world, whether customers want a taste of Greece with a traditional yoghurt, mint and cucumber dressing, pop off to Turkey and Israel with Love Joes Houmous or go across the pond to Jamaica with Reggae Reggae sauce.
Pupils who are keen to try out mouth-watering new flavour combinations can also now whizz off to Portugal with Love Joes mini chicken skewers with NEW Peri Peri marinade. To wrap it all up, the skewers are served in a choice of delicious paninette bread, pitta pocket or Mexican-style wrap, with Newcastle-under-Lyme School plumping for the paninette.
"We serve them as a handheld, grab-and-go option price at £1.80-£2.40, and as part of our main meal deal, where pupils and staff are offered the skewers with garlic bread, oven baked potatoes and mixed salad with a pudding for £3.25.
"Love Joes is our main grab-and-go offering and the majority of children will take something from the counter every day, while staff tend to purchase a main meal option. I would say we generally use the mini chicken skewers as part of the meal deal once or twice a week.
"Overall, the skewers are proving a very popular choice, boosted by branded POS material, which helps to bring the concept together. Children really do enjoy a branded concept."
For school caterers looking for a grab-and-go offering this new term, Lesley said she had no hesitation in recommending the Love Joes concepts. "There is lots of variety, it is good value and we receive excellent service from the Love Joes team," she said.