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Goldman Sachs to take out Thanksgiving trash

The Salvation Army plans to serve 10,000 free Thanksgiving dinners across New York  — meals cooked by a ritzy caterer and cleaned up by employees of one of Wall Street's most vilified financial firms.
Image: Thanksgiving dinner
Great Performances catering captain Ken Bohlander, right, on Tuesday samples the types of dishes that will be served on behalf of the Salvation Army on Thanksgiving Day in New York. He is joined by the catering company's operations manager, Josh Satterthwaite, left, and celebrity chef Marc Spooner. Kathy Willens / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

The Salvation Army plans to serve 10,000 free dinners across the city this Thanksgiving — meals planned by a star chef, cooked by one of New York's ritziest caterers and cleaned up by employees of one of Wall Street's most vilified financial firms.

The number of meals is 10 times as many as last year and come at a time when more and more Americans are struggling to put food on the table.

The turkey dinner will be prepared by Great Performances, a catering company that stages banquets for the grand ballroom of The Plaza. Leading the culinary team is star chef Marc Spooner, a winner of the Food Network's "Chopped" TV contest and the caterer's chef de cuisine.

Three hundred employees of Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Wall Street's richest firm, have volunteered for the holiday feast and will be tasked with taking out the garbage.

"Goldman wants their volunteers to sweat," joked Spooner, who at 6-foot-6 towered above a recent tasting session for the meal at Great Performances' kitchens in the SoHo neighborhood.

Goldman Sachs said the firm supports the effort, but referred all questions to the Salvation Army. The company's volunteers were not available for comment and their names would not be released, the Salvation Army said.

Huge profits, fat bonuses
The investment bank is enjoying skyrocketing profits, with angry critics pointing to huge employee bonuses expected at year's end as evidence of the kind of greed that triggered the recession. A year ago, the firm received billions in federal bailout money. So far this year, it has set aside $16.7 billion for compensation — or about $530,000 per employee — and has set aside $23 billion for bonuses.

Spooner recently joined dozens of volunteer food professionals to figure out how to serve 10,000 meals simultaneously at 10 Salvation Army community centers from Brooklyn and Harlem to the Bronx.

Standing around a long steel table, they took notes over aluminum pans filled with herb-roasted turkey breasts from Pennsylvania and the traditional sides — stuffing, gravy, yams, green beans, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, rolls and pie.

Great Performances' CEO, Liz Neumark, will help out in the Bronx with her 14-year-old son. Her elite catering company's first such effort was last year, serving 1,000 meals.

"These were regular, ordinary people, just like us, who were hungry," she said. "And you think, 'there but for the grace of God.'"

Tough times
As more Americans lose their jobs, the free turkey dinners are only a tiny sliver of the food needed to satisfy the nation's soaring hunger.

More than 49 million Americans — one in seven households — struggled to put enough food on the table in 2008. That's the highest rate since the federal Department of Agriculture began tracking food security in 1995.

Great Performances is assembling the meals at cost, forgoing any profits; private contributions are covering basic expenses.

The New York Salvation Army is itself struggling, laying off 100 employees of the 130-year-old nonprofit organization currently helping about 600,000 people in need. It was holding an event in Times Square on Friday to start a $100 million anti-poverty fundraising campaign.