Boca Helping Hands Receives 1,400 Pounds of Food from Ben’s Deli

Apr 18, 2022

Restaurants and Grocery Stores Asked to Donate to Boca Helping Hands

Boca Helping Hands (BHH) received more than 1,400 pounds of food from Ben’s Kosher Delicatessen Restaurant & Caterers, a scratch kitchen in West Boca Raton that makes each meal fresh. When the restaurant closed in observance of Passover, it was left with a large amount of food that would otherwise go to waste. Boca Helping Hands picked up the food on Friday, April 15, offering it to those in need of a meal. 


Boca Helping Hands hopes that other restaurants, cafés, and grocery stores will consider donating food to the organization, following in Ben’s Deli’s footsteps. 


“We are so pleased to donate the food to Boca Helping Hands to share our holiday with those in need,” said Rachel Stone, Ben’s Deli Director of Catering and Assistant Manager. “It does feel really good to let us extend that notion of feeding people into feeding people who are most in need of a good meal.”


This act of major giving isn’t limited to Ben’s Deli of Boca Raton. Each of the seven New York based locations also participates in food recovery efforts within their communities. “Having grown up living in eight different places by the age of 14, I am hypersensitive to the plight of the homeless and hungry,” said Ronnie Dragoon, Ben’s Deli CEO and Founder. 


“Receiving leftover prepared food from Ben’s Deli is a tremendous blessing,” said Bill Harper, BHH Director of Food and Warehouse Operations. “This food is used right away in our hot meal program to feed local families in need. Ben’s has been faithful through the years with their donations at Passover, and we always look forward to this significant assistance. Partnerships with local restaurants are vital to carrying out our mission at Boca Helping Hands.”


“Surging food prices and supply chain issues are affecting all areas of our hunger relief programs. We’re purchasing food to subsidize our decreased inventory, and wholesale prices have increased,” said Greg Hazle, BHH Executive Director. “With increased prices, our client’s dollar stretches less at the grocery store, so they have to rely on us more. Unfortunately, that means Boca Helping Hands has to buy more food at a higher cost.”


Restaurants, cafés, or grocery stores that would like to help can reach out to info@bocahelpinghands.org.

 

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