Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Pandemic-weary chefs, cooks enjoy serving from home

- By Terry Tang

When COVID-19 shutdowns hit in March 2020, Mike Winneker, a hotel executive sous chef, found himself without work for the first time in years. Between caring for a 6-year-old son and waiting for unemployme­nt benefits, days now spent at home in Scottsdale were stressful.

One night in June, Winneker, 33, cooked up some tacos with beef chuck and beef cheeks. Seeing what a large quantity he had, he came up with the idea of selling tacos. His first test run was a post on the NextDoor app offering brisket barbacoa tacos in his driveway. Winneker decided he would only do it if he had at least $300 in pre-sales.

He made $800 in one day. “As of right now, I got 300 people on an email list,” said Winneker, who has since been offering tacos twice a week via email and Instagram. “If I capture even a small percentage of that, it helps pay my bills.”

Beaten down by the pandemic, many laid-off or idle restaurant workers have pivoted to dishing out food with a taste of home. Some have found their entreprene­urial side, slinging culinary creations from their own kitchens.

In many cases, that can mean running up against or accommodat­ing health regulation­s. These chefs and caterers say they need money and a purpose, and their plight has cast new light on an ongoing debate about regulation­s over the sale of home-cooked meals.

The rules around serving food for immediate consumptio­n vary across states, making for a complex patchwork of requiremen­ts, said Martin Hahn, an attorney at Hogan Lovells, which specialize­s in food industry law. States generally refer to federal guidelines, but counties and cities drive permit and licensing conditions. While some states have cottage food laws allowing inhouse preparatio­n, those are for “low-risk” products like jams and breads.

“The first place I would go is call my local health department, find out whether there are any licensing requiremen­ts, permits you need to have and any restrictio­ns on being able to operate this type of a business out of your home,” Hahn said.

Don Schaffner, a food science professor at Rutgers University who has given workshops on food safety, said home-cooked foods with items like raw meat are a gamble for consumers. They have to assume that proper storage, prevention of cross-contaminat­ion and other best practices were followed.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chef Mike Winneker prepares tacos in front of his home Saturday, April 3, in Scottsdale, Ariz.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chef Mike Winneker prepares tacos in front of his home Saturday, April 3, in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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