The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gate Gourmet in-flight meals cater to internatio­nal tastes

Caterer takes care of carriers leaving Hartsfield-Jackson.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kelly.yamanouchi@ajc.com

At the Gate Gourmet kitchen at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, about 200 employees work daily to transform hundreds of pounds of fresh vegetables, cheeses and meats into in-flight meals for internatio­nal departures out of Atlanta.

Airline food used to be the butt of jokes, when rubbery chicken and squishy pasta were the standard at every coach seat in decades past.

Now, there are far fewer compliment­ary meals on domestic flights — but in first class, business class and internatio­nal cabins, in-flight meals have become a distinguis­hing factor as airlines compete against each other globally with fancier fare and celebrity chefs.

The shift started before the COVID-19 pandemic, when U.S. airlines “were very much competing not only with each other, but also with the internatio­nals,” said Jens Kuhlen, Gategroup’s president for North America. Foreign carriers known for high-end service that fly to the United States “are creating a certain expectatio­n with the customer.”

Then, the pandemic caused internatio­nal travel to plummet and prompted airlines to cut back. But they’ve since resumed full menus amid a post-pandemic rebound in passenger demand.

That has led to “this climb again” toward more innovative food, Kuhlen said.

“It cannot just always be the short rib,” he said.

At Gate Gourmet, a subsidiary of Zurich, Switzerlan­d-based food and hospitalit­y company Gategroup, Molly Brandt as executive chef of culinary innovation for North America is responsibl­e for staying on top of culinary innovation­s and dreaming up new menus. The company also uses technology from data science firm Black Swan Media to scan social media and predict future food trends.

Gate Gourmet was once the in-flight caterer for Delta Air Lines in Atlanta, but the carrier switched to French in-flight caterer Newrest and Atlanta-based Goldbergs Group subsidiary Mainline Aviation at its Atlanta hub, as it refashione­d meal service coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic. Delta still contracts with Gate Gourmet for in-flight catering at many other locations around the world.

Gate Gourmet now serves foreign carriers in Atlanta including Air France, British Airways and Qatar Airways.

The company’s 72,000-square-foot facility on Charles W. Grant Parkway has a hot and cold kitchen and a halal process kitchen, about a mile from the airport ramp where meals are delivered to the plane with specialize­d vehicles. There, it prepares an average of 4,800 meals a day for about seven daily flights, with multiple meals served on many of the flights.

In Atlanta, Brandt’s menu ideas include Southern influences on internatio­nal dishes, with Georgia-produced ingredient­s like Spotted Trotter salami and Sweet Grass Dairy farm cheese aged in Gate City Brewing Co. Terminus Porter.

Coca-Cola barbecue sauce-glazed meatloaf Brandt prepared for a tasting has Southern flair and can be adapted into other versions, she said.

“You still have to bring in this element of what is interestin­g from both perspectiv­es —from a North American’s perspectiv­e and, let’s say, the home country’s perspectiv­e,” Brandt said. “Because usually there’s a mix of demographi­cs that are flying in that particular route.”

It “requires a ton of research,” Brandt said. She calls friends who are from the country the airline is flying in from, and asks them, “‘What do you miss? ... What is it that your mom made? What is it that you miss eating on the street?’”

She conceptual­izes in-flight dishes and prepares tasting menus for airline officials who are in charge of deciding what gets served on flights — and taking into considerat­ion everything from the cost to how to procure the ingredient­s to how the meal will taste after it’s reheated on the plane.

Internatio­nal business class passengers might pay thousands of dollars for a flight, and they have grown to expect elevated dining at their seat. But there are plenty of challenges to creating fine dining in the sky that is similar to what can be found in high-end restaurant­s.

For one thing, altitude and pressuriza­tion on the plane can dull the taste buds.

“I like to make sure that there’s a lot of umami; I like to make sure we have a lot of acid that’s happening there,” Brandt said.

Supply chain problems during the pandemic also forced many catering companies to find alternativ­e vendors.

“The idea of getting everything from any part of the world because it basically can be produced in bigger batches and thereby less costs — that is probably long gone,” Kuhlen said.

Other issues that restrict in-flight menu choices are that meals are prepared a day in advance of the flight and then chilled, there’s limited capacity for reheating trays in plane galleys, knife restrictio­ns on planes, and food safety standards for in-flight meals that affect how a steak can be prepared, for example.

What Brandt is aiming for is an in-flight meal that will “perform and be bulletproo­f, no matter how long it’s going to be heated up.” That’s because even if a meal is supposed to be heated in the aircraft galley oven for 20 minutes, “if there’s turbulence, all of a sudden it’s in there for 40,” she said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Chef Molly Brandt, executive chef of culinary innovation for North America at Gategroup, explains the details of inflight dishes that have been prepared for a tasting at Gate Gourmet.
PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Chef Molly Brandt, executive chef of culinary innovation for North America at Gategroup, explains the details of inflight dishes that have been prepared for a tasting at Gate Gourmet.
 ?? ?? Barbecue meatloaf, pimento macaroni and cheese, beans and greens, Coca-Cola glaze and fresh slaw are part of proposed dishes with an Atlanta flair. Meals are designed to appeal both to locals and those from afar.
Barbecue meatloaf, pimento macaroni and cheese, beans and greens, Coca-Cola glaze and fresh slaw are part of proposed dishes with an Atlanta flair. Meals are designed to appeal both to locals and those from afar.

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