eG Forums: Treats for Construction Workers - eG Forums

Jump to content

Welcome to eGullet.org! This website is a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, a 501c3 nonprofit organization dedicated to advancement of the culinary arts. Anyone can read these forums, however if you want to participate in active discussions you must join the Society. If you'd like to receive our news and update emails, please become a NewsGullet subscriber.

Page 1 of 1

Treats for Construction Workers Well-fed workers = Great results

#1 User is offline   baroness

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 523
  • Joined: 13-February 07
  • Location:New York City

Posted 08 November 2009 - 06:53 AM

I am in the process of having my entire basement floor replaced; all the old concrete, soil, odd pipes, and so forth were removed Friday. The new floor will be poured tomorrow(Monday), and with the logistics involved will require almost all the material be carried in by hand. :blink: So I will have at least 8 hardworking, perhaps chilly workers plus their boss whom I would like to treat at breaktime. The boss usually gets coffee and bagels - and lunch; whatever I make will be extra and can be snacked on for the day.

Since a great deal of the items usually IN the basement are now in the kitchen creating an an obstacle course :wacko: , I need to keep my treat(s) easy to make. Anything I could make today rather than tomorrow would be great. I'm thinking that the baked item(s) need to be able to be easily consumed with one hand and not require additions (butter, jam, etc.).

Muffins were my first thought; pumpkin and/or corn (enriched with corn kernels, cheese)...Then I remembered an Apple-cinnamon snack cake that would work; also Oatmeal-peanut butter-chocolate chip bars. The latter two could be made tonight, cut and wrapped individually.

What would YOU make?

#2 User is offline   Darienne

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 1,213
  • Joined: 27-August 08
  • Location:Rolling Hills of Cavan, Ontario

Posted 08 November 2009 - 07:37 AM

Just found your post. Gosh, I love the idea of such a thread, and was immediately thinking about my own need for answers as to what to make for gifts for the paper lady, the postal lady, the veterinarians, our butcher, guys at the transfer station (aka garbage dump), and so forth. These wonderful folks are so good to us...and our dogs :wub: ...that I always make things for them. It seems the more sugar and butter, the better.

We need to make sure whatever it we make corresponds to what 'others' like. Now I wouldn't thank anyone for milk chocolate :raz: , but others seem to like it best. I have to keep that in mind given my own proclivities. I gave some delicious dark chocolate to two friends in Moab last year, and they each said...it tastes like pure cocoa. Interesting.

So my first response to the 'corn' idea is...No, not corn. But the oatmeal, peanut butter, chocolate chip item..Yes! Guys like stuff like that for sure. Builder guys invariably like that stuff. Almost all kids like that.

I'll think about what you can make, although you'll get better answers from experienced bakers.
Darienne


learn, learn, learn...

Cheers & Chocolates

#3 User is offline   Jacquester

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 37
  • Joined: 27-September 09
  • Location:Queens, NY

Posted 08 November 2009 - 08:14 AM

It just so happens that one of the businesses that I run is a construction company. I also buy lunch for my guys, and in the afternoon we usually send for coffee, so I was thinking something like coffee cakes, muffins, or cookies or mini pies. I think more mainstream rather than artsy would go over better with these type of guys.
“I cook with wine, sometimes I even add it to the food.”
W.C. Fields

#4 User is offline   Marlene

  • Group: eGullet Society staff emeritus
  • Posts: 7,841
  • Joined: 16-August 02
  • Location:Ontario, Canada

Posted 08 November 2009 - 08:28 AM

I do a lot of this right now as we are putting on an addition at the cottage. Cinnamon rolls can be retarded in the fridge overnight and baked off in the morning for a fresh treat. Cookies, muffins, coffee cake can all be baked the day before. Banana bread. Carrot cake in a 9 x 13 pan so can be cut in individual servings easily.
Marlene
Cookskorner.com


Practice. Do it over. Get it right.

#5 User is offline   Lior

  • Group: society donor
  • Posts: 1,497
  • Joined: 20-April 07
  • Location:Ashkelon,Israel

Posted 08 November 2009 - 08:33 AM

warm cinnamon rolls or anything yeast and warm will always be very welcomed I am sure!!
Boy, the construction workers I had once were fussy. Black mud coffee with lots of sugar, anything else was left untouched. Sandwiches with omelettes and vegetables and nothing else!!! :laugh:

#6 User is offline   tafkap4d

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 97
  • Joined: 24-July 05
  • Location:Atlanta

Posted 08 November 2009 - 08:34 AM

Wonderful ideas. I was thinking a nice rice krispie treat (for a mid-day snack) - the larger ones maybe jazzed up a bit.

I am a fan of ooey, gooey butter cakes, oatmeal chocolate chip muffins, and I agree something hearty and not to artsy would go well.

Thank you for the ideas - we are having some landscaping work done in our yard in a few weeks and I think that would be a nice treat for the workers.

Let us know what you decide.
Whoever said that man cannot live by bread alone...simply did not know me.

#7 User is offline   Kerry Beal

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 4,360
  • Joined: 22-July 05
  • Location:Ontario, Canada

Posted 08 November 2009 - 08:59 AM

My construction guys got chocolate - whatever I happened to be making at the time. They snarfed them down pretty readily.

But under the constraints you have I'd probably make coffee cake, brownies, gingerbread (the cake kind), blondies, cheese or raisin biscuits, big soft cookies (sour cream cookies - quick and dirty to make - variations like hermit easily done) or muffins.

#8 User is online   nibor

  • Group: society donor
  • Posts: 334
  • Joined: 09-October 06

Posted 08 November 2009 - 09:11 AM

Chocolate chip cookies.

#9 User is offline   baroness

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 523
  • Joined: 13-February 07
  • Location:New York City

Posted 08 November 2009 - 11:22 AM

Here's one of the reasons I love eG...the range of tastes, experiences, and opinions. :wub:

I probably would not have thought of brownies (I like dark chocolate, but not many chocolate-flavored things), without Kerry's suggestion.
Thinking "manstream"/mainstream -- should the brownies be plain? Seems that a lot of people don't like nuts in them.

I don't think I can play with yeasted items, due to lack of counter space; also the timing of errands that may come up tomorrow.

Rice krispie treats sound good, too, for those who don't like chocolate.

If only I could think of a non-sweet/savory bar "cookie" to add to the mix........

#10 User is offline   tmriga

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 214
  • Joined: 28-August 05

Posted 08 November 2009 - 11:28 AM

Gotta have brownies. I have a couple of guys who work in construction, and they'd rather have brownies than cake or cookies, any time.

As for savory, how about some bacon-cheddar muffins?

Theresa :smile:
"Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power."
- Abraham Lincoln

#11 User is offline   KarenDW

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 396
  • Joined: 21-February 07
  • Location:Vancouver, BC, Canada

Posted 08 November 2009 - 12:09 PM

Anything which includes bacon, or cheese, or chocolate. Maybe some a combination thereof. Cut into pieces that are not too big, and won't crumble. If you decide to go the muffin route, I'd suggest smaller, like 2-3 bite size, and make more of them :)
Brownies and choc. chip cookies seem to be the big winners, here.
Karen DW,
aka Biscotti Queen

#12 User is offline   CKatCook

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 438
  • Joined: 30-July 05

Posted 08 November 2009 - 01:01 PM

I also vote for the brownies, and rice krispy treats, cookies, but maybe something more savory like some kind of finger sandwiches?

edit to add: Hot wings, buffalo chicken wings would go over big as well I bet.

This post has been edited by CKatCook: 08 November 2009 - 01:02 PM

"I eat fat back, because bacon is too lean"
-overheard from a 105 year old man

#13 User is offline   Kerry Beal

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 4,360
  • Joined: 22-July 05
  • Location:Ontario, Canada

Posted 08 November 2009 - 01:03 PM

I know AnnaN does a great savory muffin with cheese - could top with crispy bacon.

#14 User is offline   baroness

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 523
  • Joined: 13-February 07
  • Location:New York City

Posted 08 November 2009 - 01:50 PM

The wings would be a big hit in more 'civilized' circumstances, but the guys will lose access to washing-up facilities (other than the outdoor hose bib) early in the floor-restoring process. :unsure:

That's why I'm trying to limit the treats to things that can be eaten out of their wrappers; and that will taste fine at 65 degrees or cooler. The boss WILL be getting their lunch, so perhaps I should stay out of the savory arena.

#15 User is offline   tmriga

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 214
  • Joined: 28-August 05

Posted 08 November 2009 - 03:15 PM

How about whoopie pies? They can be made in different flavors, they're eaten with the hands, and can be made into 2-3 bites size.

Theresa :smile:
"Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power."
- Abraham Lincoln

#16 User is offline   velveeta

  • Group: society donor
  • Posts: 25
  • Joined: 31-October 09

Posted 08 November 2009 - 03:56 PM

What a nice thought. My plan would be:

Chocolate chip cookies
Small precut bunches of grapes
Small rolls made into ham and turkey sandwiches, just a few bites each (even though the boss is getting lunch)
Gatorade assortment (small bottles) on ice
Roasted nuts or a Chex Mix type concoction (I make mine with fresh roasted nuts, oat squares, raisins, dried cherries)
Rice Krispie bars cut into small pieces
Carafes of hot chocolate and coffee

We had some work done recently and I was surprised at how healthy and careful the eating habits were.

#17 User is offline   baroness

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 523
  • Joined: 13-February 07
  • Location:New York City

Posted 08 November 2009 - 06:12 PM

I e-mailed a young electrician friend a list of many of the above choices.
His response: "Great idea! Workers will respect you more and work happier if you give them something for their coffee break." :wink:

His first choice was the cinnamon apple coffee cake, which was already baking when I read his response.
The brownies are cooling now, and I'll do the RK bars later tonight or early in the morning.
I think I've done enough obstacle course baking for now..... :wacko:

#18 User is offline   heidih

  • Group: host
  • Posts: 1,718
  • Joined: 10-March 07

Posted 08 November 2009 - 08:06 PM

I am on the brownie and chocolate chip cookie train as well. Things that are one or two bites and not sticky or gooey. Sometimes I bake them in a disposable pan and just give the the pan with a plastic knife, a handful of napkins or paper towels and some small zip lock bags so they can take the extras home. They usually have water jugs, but extras water bottles are sometimes appreciated. Things with a screw top they can transport without spillage.
Heidi Husnak aka "heidih"
Host, eG Forums
hhusnak@eGstaff.org

#19 User is offline   helenjp

  • Group: host
  • Posts: 2,969
  • Joined: 08-March 03
  • Location:Chiba prefecture, Japan

Posted 08 November 2009 - 08:12 PM

Eat out of the wrapper....that spells stuffed, baked potatoes to me!

#20 User is offline   Darienne

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 1,213
  • Joined: 27-August 08
  • Location:Rolling Hills of Cavan, Ontario

Posted 09 November 2009 - 07:03 AM

View Postheidih, on 08 November 2009 - 10:06 PM, said:

I am on the brownie and chocolate chip cookie train as well. Things that are one or two bites and not sticky or gooey. Sometimes I bake them in a disposable pan and just give the the pan with a plastic knife, a handful of napkins or paper towels and some small zip lock bags so they can take the extras home. They usually have water jugs, but extras water bottles are sometimes appreciated. Things with a screw top they can transport without spillage.

Hmmmm...that could go into the mailbox for eating on the long drive (rural mail). Or to the computer tech guys. Oh, great for the transfer station guys. Who can resist a brownie...better than fudge or most confectionery items for guys. Thanks. Heidi. :smile:
Darienne


learn, learn, learn...

Cheers & Chocolates

#21 User is offline   rena

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 9
  • Joined: 13-October 09

Posted 09 November 2009 - 11:42 AM

For the savory, what about puff pastry with a little tomato sauce, mozarella, and basil or onion which ever. YOu don't have to make the puff pastry just buy it.....

Rena

#22 User is offline   prasantrin

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 4,786
  • Joined: 01-September 03

Posted 09 November 2009 - 02:52 PM

Sausage rolls are the perfect savoury bite-sized snack. You can make them small so they really are bite-sized, but you can make them larger, too, if you want to offer them something more substantial.

I use store-bought puff pastry, ground pork, shallots if I can get them, and penzey's breakfast sausage seasoning. Sometimes I add cheese (omg--it's soooo good! Especially when the cheese melts out and makes those crispy cheese webs all around), or chopped asparagus or red peppers if I want to give pretense of making "healthful" sausage rolls.
Rona Y.

#23 User is offline   judiu

  • Group: society donor
  • Posts: 1,304
  • Joined: 22-March 04
  • Location:South Florida

Posted 09 November 2009 - 03:31 PM

Think not too picky or idealistic 17 year old boys; normally, they'll eat anything that's not nailed down, or that won't put up too big a fight to eat them first! :laugh: HTH!
"Commit random acts of senseless kindness"

Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

1 User(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users