The Oklahoman

Restaurant relief group hopes to serve a win-win

- By Mark Kennedy AP Entertainm­ent Writer

NEW YORK — Chefs need to be good at math to keep their menus balanced. But Chef Erik Bruner-Yang is applying his math skills to help something larger — the decimated restaurant industry.

The Washington, D.Cbased Bruner-Yang has establishe­d The Power of 10, a nonprofit initiative that seeks donations to reemploy laid-off independen­t restaurant workers, keep the eateries open and provide their meals to neighborho­od workers on the front line of the pandemic.

The initiative aims to raise $10,000 in donations per week to support 10 full-time jobs at a local restaurant.

Those workers — earning an hourly wage of $14.50 — then provide 1,000 meals to hospital workers, homeless shelters and others in need. Donations start as little as $10 for one meal.

“You're buying a meal for us to cook for someone else, and all the restaurant­s share in the pot,” Bruner-Yang

said. “The math works everywhere. The Power of 10 is just an easy way for people to understand how their donation works.”

The program got a huge shot in the arm Wednesday when Capital One announced it would sink hundreds of thousands of dollars into the effort. Thanks to the donation, The Power of 10 will now have over $750,000 in funding, giving it an ability to serve over 70,000 meals in the next four weeks.

Begun in Washington in late March with three restaurant­s, The Power of 10 now helps 30 restaurant­s, in that city; Los Angeles;

New York City; Charlotte, North Carolina; Chicago; Dallas; Baltimore; and the Virginia communitie­s of Richmond and Fairfax City.

Some of the latest restaurant­s to sign on include Mi Tocaya Antojeria in Chicago, Guelaguetz­a in Los Angeles, and the two New York hot spots Field Trip and La Newyorkina.

Bruner-Yang, whose restaurant­s include the Italian-Asian pasta shop ABC Pony and the Cambodian-Taiwanese cafe Maketto, said the helping concept came relatively easily.

“The math kind of happened on its own, really. I was trying to figure out what I needed to do to save my own business. How many meals did I need to serve per week? How many people would that allow me to keep employed? And how much money I would need to generate to do that.”

He worries that restaurant­s across the country are imperiled, and a community of vendors and chefs may collapse. “I have a platform. I have resources. I have access. I have to make sure I keep my neighborho­od intact,” he said.

Bruner-Yang says his organizati­on works in coordinati­on with Jose Andres's World Central Kitchen, as well as working with other groups with logistics.

“I think everybody is playing a role. No one should feel bad doing one thing or the other. I think everyone needs to make the choice that's best for them. For me, all I know is hospitalit­y and working.”

 ??  ?? This image released by The Power of 10 shows chef Erik Bruner-Yang helping to pack meals at Cane, the first restaurant to reopen under The Power of 10, for hospital workers at Medstar Washington Hospital Center in Washington, D.C. [VINA SANANIKONE/ THE POWER OF 10/AP]
This image released by The Power of 10 shows chef Erik Bruner-Yang helping to pack meals at Cane, the first restaurant to reopen under The Power of 10, for hospital workers at Medstar Washington Hospital Center in Washington, D.C. [VINA SANANIKONE/ THE POWER OF 10/AP]

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States