How We Share Meals At Ridejoy: From Costco to Community Supported Agriculture

This is the third post in a series by Camille, Ridejoy Happiness Manager, on food, community, and (collaborative) consumption. Part 1: (Finding Our Happiness Manager) Part 2: (Food Matters)

Grilled Yucatecan fish tacos with roasted pineapple salsa and pickled onions, stewed black beans, and rice with onion and cilantro. Delicious!

When poking around the internet around the idea and practice of “eating with coworkers” brings up a variety of illuminating articles on common office food culture. We see people talking about how to avoid social, but pricy, out-of-office lunches, deal with annoying habits of other desk eaters, protect your lunch in the company fridge, and cope with the food habits of others that are sabotaging your dieting attempts.

I think these are all symptoms of a problem that is characterized by a lack of positive food culture at work. Food should be something that makes people satisfied and happy (food, shelter, water, and companionship are, arguably, all a person really needs), not be a source of conflict and resentment.

The Challenges of Creating a Positive Food Culture

A few weeks ago, based on my experience in cooking for large groups and as a way to add variety to our lives, we began weaning ourselves off of Costco’s extensive selection of prepared foods (although the chocolate-covered strawberries and as much fruit juice as you can drink have stayed). We started getting a CSA box and I began cooking dinners from the team.

With two Paleo-dieters, two more meat fiends, a carb lover, and an intermittent vegetarian, I have my work cut out for myself staying creative enough to keep everyone fed, body and soul. There needs to be enough animal protein, an optional grain, preferably a vegetable protein, and lots of veggies and greens. And, I’d prefer the dishes to complement each other.

But, once you beat those logistical challenges into a delicious pulp, you get to bring ingestible joy to Ridejoy!

How We Found the Balance

While eating meals in the office isn’t for everyone, it’s something we enjoy doing at Ridejoy. Our work hours and personal lives happen to make it convenient for us to eat together for dinner twice a week. When we sit down and share a meal together, we reify our commitment to working together, and getting along. Good food is a great way to share happiness with others. It’s also been a wonderful excuse to invite interesting people into the office!

Great meals don’t happen by accident, it takes some planning and coordination. Here are some of the steps I took to engineer happy group meals – if you’re interested in doing this at your company, maybe you’ll find them helpful! This can be applied to meals eaten out and meals catered in, not just ones made in-house.

  1. Sit down with the group
    Starting a conversation about food will take time and you need to create a space for people to discuss openly. If it’s too hard to coordinate a group sitting, be prepared to get and send a lot of emails.
  2. Find common denominators and set common definitions
    - Ask about food allergies, dietary restrictions, spiciness tolerance, and absolute deal-breakers. Keep any allergens out of the kitchen.
    - Make sure your definitions match (does vegetarian mean “strict vegetarian” or vegan, or eggs and milk?).
    - If only one person hates asparagus, just don’t have asparagus play a major role in any dish and keep it as a side. But if three out of five can’t stand asparagus, take it off the menu.
    - Have everyone send you an example of their ideal meal and favorite flavors.
  3. Cook a few meals
    Based on what you’ve learned, put some meals together and see what people think. As long as you follow what you learned from Step 2, the meals will be fine, and there shouldn’t be any disasters.
  4. Gather feedback
    We post our meals on a spreadsheet and ask people for feedback. Takes notes on favorite flavors, themes, preferences of dark vs light meat, proportions of veggies/protein/carbs. Remember these notes, look at them all the time because they’ll help you stay focused and be creative (limits can be awesome).
  5. Mix it up
    Once I got the hang of what people generally like and don’t like, I was able to start exploring new ingredients and dishes. Great places to find good recipes include Epicurious (for when you know what you want to make), Foodgawker (for inspiration & window shopping), and the many amazing food blogs out there.
  6. Be nice, don’t judge, and have fun!

Palak paneer, daal vada (lentil fritters), kadhai jhinga (curried shrimp), sweet pepper & yogurt salad, and brown rice.

Keep reading for tips how to make food work for a group for a happier, more productive team!

Psst: We're looking for our first engineering hire!
Refer a hire and you both get Ridejoy's Ultimate Collaborative Consumption Package!
$1000 credit for Airbnb, Taskrabbit, Grubwithus, Getaround, RelayRides, Skillshare, or more.

Food Matters: Building a Startup Office Culture One Meal at a Time

This is a series of posts by Camille, Ridejoy Happiness Manager, on food, community, and (collaborative) consumption.

Ridejoy (and friends) waiting for their cue to grab a plate! (credit Garry Tan)

At Ridejoy, we’re on a mission. We’re excited about creating an awesome service to share rides with friendly people, and we’re inspired to bring together people in their cars and create a more sustainable society.

But a strong mission isn’t worth much without a strong company culture to bring that vision to life. By bringing ourselves together first, we can set our goals clearly and do our best work.

I think how Ridejoy hires and who’s been brought onboard demonstrates dedication to an amazing company culture. But at Ridejoy, we’re not just a team, we’re a family, and families eat together.

That’s where I come in.

The Back-story

I originally discovered Ridejoy deep in a Hacker News thread. I loved what they were doing, so one night I sent them a long email expressing my delight at the thoughtful way they’re building community, and asking if they needed help.

That began my journey from enthusiastic ridesharer to a part of the Ridejoy team. I came onboard part-time to lend a hand as Office Hero, helping out with administrative and social media tasks.

A week later, inspired by Thumbtack’s Food Rules post, we decided to experiment with home-cooked meals based on my experience as a cook and kitchen manager in 100+ member housing cooperatives. It’s worked out great and the Office Hero evolved into the Ridejoy Happiness Manager.

Dining Well

We now eat healthy meals together most nights of the week and it’s been fantastic.

As someone who’s spent her formative years in the East Bay’s local and organic food movement, I’ve witnessed the power of how food can bring people together and build community. Our team dinners let us sit down, savor the moment and unwind for a bit together.

One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well.
-Virginia Woolf

I believe that by sharing and accepting what others share, life can be more satisfying, sustainable, and safe. By making meals in the office, we get to reify our beliefs about sustainability and community by buying raw ingredients from Farm Fresh to You (a CSA program that delivers in San Francisco) and sourcing more ethical meats. Quality meals turn into quality time together.

This is just the beginning! In my next post, I’ll share specific tips on how we make food work for us and build community within our team through food.

A dinner I made last week: mesquite-rubbed pork, sweet potato cakes, pan-fried chickpea salad, roasted asparagus, and brown rice

Psst: We're looking for our first engineering hire!
Refer a hire and you both get Ridejoy's Ultimate Collaborative Consumption Package!
$1000 credit for Airbnb, Taskrabbit, Grubwithus, Getaround, RelayRides, Skillshare, or more.