21 Sept 7th–Sept 13th, 2023 phoenixnewtimes.com phoenix new Times | cONTeNTs | feeDBacK | OPiNiON | NeWs | feaTuRe | NighT+Day | culTuRe | film | cafe | music | A Helping Hand UMOM’s Helpings Cafe raises money for Phoenix shelter, provides a ‘light’ for residents. BY GEORGANN YARA A t a fast-casual restaurant in east Phoenix, the breakfast- all-day menu boasts peren- nial favorites such as avocado toast and chila- quiles alongside lunch-friendly items, including hot and cold sandwiches, salads, tacos and carne asada fries. In the bright, open dining area, a cold case filled with take-and-heat ziti, chipotle chicken wraps, grilled vegetable pasta salad and frescas con crema are prepped for customers who wish to take their suste- nance to go. Butterscotch blondies, snick- erdoodles and zucchini muffins filled with cream cheese are among the 10 selections in the baked goods case next to the register. Everything is made fresh daily steps away in the commercial kitchen, and a barista stands behind the counter, on call for made-to-order Starbucks pick-me-ups. At first blush, nothing seems distinctive about this breakfast and lunch spot. Yet its ownership, the team that runs it and where its revenue goes are. Helpings Cafe opened at UMOM New Day Centers in 2014. In its early years, it was seen as an extension of United Methodist Outreach Ministries and a proving ground for students of the nonprof- it’s Homegrown Training Program, which provides training in restaurant hospitality and assists with job placement. Recently, however, Helpings has earned its own identity as a neighborhood gath- ering spot for breakfast and lunch, a locale for business meetings and a reliable eatery for the UMOM campus’s 100 or so employees and residents. Over the past couple of years, the cafe has evolved into a crucial revenue source for the shelter, which provides resources for single women and families experi- encing homelessness. “It’s such a unique thing for a nonprofit to have a social enterprise of their own, a revenue generator, source of income … and UMOM has nailed it,” says Eric Sperling, CEO of The Social Television Network, a catering client of more than a year. Generating revenue by pushing boundaries The six-week culinary Homegrown Training Program runs year-round and is open to anyone in UMOM housing. A team of professional chefs teach students front and back of the house jobs ranging from customer service to food prep and cooking. The barista program utilizes Starbucks coffee, espresso and tea, with students learning how to make the chain’s most popular beverages. Each cohort comprises 10 students who are selected after an application and inter- view process. At the end of the program, they are honored with a graduation cere- mony, and each graduate receives a knife kit, chef’s coat and certificate. Students are not paid for their on-the-job training but receive a $250 Visa gift card at the three- week mark and another on completion. Helpings Cafe was the brainchild of former UMOM CEO Darlene Newsome, who retired in 2020 after 18 years of helming the nonprofit. The restaurant and catering menus initially featured simple breakfast dishes, salads and sandwiches. But after the pandemic hit, followed by ensuing months of adjusting to a new normal, the catering side took off with board members and associates of UMOM requesting food for meetings and small dinner parties with those in their bubbles, explains UMOM COO Monique Lopez. Around the same time, the catering division was awarded an 18-month contract with Maricopa County to provide meals for people in county hotels who tested positive for or were at risk of contracting COVID-19. This, Lopez says, was the first time the team realized they could enter into catering contracts. With each new opportunity, Helpings’ personnel grasped how much they were capable of and that the only obstacle was uncharted territory. “All of the rules we put on ourselves for no reason came off during that time,” Lopez says. Soon, they were fulfilling any request. From bacon-wrapped shrimp and chicken wings to brunch for 150 people with food served in elegant chafing dishes, private parties and evening events, nothing was off the table. Regular catering clients continued to push boundaries with their requests, and the students continued to deliver. The Social Television Network hires the cafe to provide passed appetizers for monthly happy hour and mingling events that draw community and city leaders. Its requests for sophisticated and out-of-the- box dishes were among the first that encouraged the Helpings team to stretch. Mini barbecue chopped salad shooters, shredded beef taquitos with avocado cream and house-made chips are among the popular bites, says Sperling, whose Phoenix- based network focuses on nonprofits and community leaders’ charitable efforts. “You think of the community impact with its mission, but you don’t anticipate the food to be amazing,” Sperling says. “But the food comes and you go, ‘Oh my gosh, it’s incredible!’” A path to joining the workforce Helpings quickly gained its own brand and identity. Today, about 40% of Helpings’ business comes from catering, which includes several contracted jobs, Lopez says. Helpings went from making zero money to being on track to generate $100,000 in revenue this year, with every dollar going back to UMOM. About 90% of students complete the program, and there’s a similar success rate for getting a job within 30 days of graduation, says Edwin Jimenez, director of social enterprise. Together with chef instructor Steven Wimbley, Jimenez works on improving menus and proper pricing to make the program run efficiently. They ask clients for feedback on how to get better, which has helped create many return customers, Jimenez says. “We want to put our best foot forward,” Jimenez says. “Whatever you need, we’re doing it. It’s an exciting time.” Over the last year, Kind Hospitality, a Tempe-based restaurant management group that oversees several brands throughout the state, has partnered with UMOM for job interviews and referrals of program alumni. In that time, the company has hired about a dozen graduates to fill culinary and barista positions at some of the 11 restaurants under its umbrella, says Derek Boettcher, executive VP of operations for Kind. Several have a presence at Phoenix Sky Harbor International or Phoenix Mesa Gateway airports, like Panera Bread, Macayo’s Mexican Food and Infusion Coffee & Tea. Most of Kind’s hires from UMOM are for airport jobs spanning customer service, quality control, building sandwiches at Panera and making specialty java drinks for Infusion. With their education and training, program graduates start Helpings Cafe is an educational hub and revenue source for UMOM New Day Centers, which provides resources for single women and families experiencing homelessness. (Photos by Georgann Yara) ▼ Chow >> p xx