Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

On the Job: Mike Steiskal

When people on campus are nostalgic for comfort foods, newlyweds want to celebrate their nuptials or world-renowned artistes want to cap spectacular performances with special meals, Mike Steiskal, a food service administrator IV at Krannert Center for the Performing Arts, is the maestro who orchestrates those gastronomic events. Steiskal, a chef who trained at Washburn Culinary Institute, Chicago, has been dishing up memorable meals, hors d’oeuvres and desserts at KCPA for about eight years. Prior to joining the UI’s staff, Steiskal was the director of food service for the student union at Eastern Illinois University for seven years and owned three restaurants in Springfield over the course of seven years.

What got you interested in the culinary field?

It’s sort of an ethnic-family thing. And wealth was manifested in food, and food was given to family. My mom did a lot of cooking and made a lot of homemade breads, sausages and soups. Everything was homemade; we just didn’t have convenience foods growing up.

For Easter, it’s a family tradition to make homemade rye bread and sausage. This year, we made 40 pounds of sausage, and we grated our own horseradish and mixed it with beets for red horseradish sauce. It’s excellent on a sausage. Oxtails are another family tradition, which are roast pork and sauerkraut dumplings. Just for fun, I sell oxtails here at the café on occasion and we sell out, believe it or not.

What does your job entail?

I run the Intermezzo Café, Interlude bar, hospitality for the artists that perform here and catering inside Krannert Center. I have a staff of 40 students and four civil service workers. We serve everything from healthy to decadent food and everything in between.

We put out a dessert deck each night of a performance with 10 different desserts. We also feature the Carnegie Cheesecake, which comes from the Carnegie Deli across from Carnegie Hall in New York City. They’re famous for their cheesecakes, which aren’t your ordinary cheesecake – they weigh about 20 pounds a piece – and we go through a couple a week. Chicago Sweet Connection does our other desserts.

Grilled cheese day is our busiest lunch day. We advertise it as “grilled cheese, tomato soup and a Rice Krispie Treat (nap optional).” It’s a memory from people’s childhoods and strikes a chord about when they ate that for lunch and then had a nap afterwards. Demand is pretty consistent at about 100 each time.

Our other theme foods are toasties, which are toasted sandwiches. We do a fresh mozzarella, basil and salmon with balsamic vinaigrette on Mondays and super nachos on Fridays.

Are your student workers in the hospitality program here on campus?

No, they’re just regular students. Normally we get them when they’re freshmen and they stay with us all the way through. We have a very diverse group of student workers.

What kinds of things do the performers request?

Sometimes it’s nice and simple, such as a turkey sandwich, chips and a soda for them and the crew. Other times it has to be all organic, vegan and no dairy. We do a lot of buffets with veggie trays, assorted beverages, and certain drinks, teas and brand-name yogurts that they request.

How much food do you go through during a week or month?

We’ve served more than 12,000 toaster sandwiches since August. We go through about $7,000 a week in raw foods.

What do you enjoy most about your job?

The satisfaction of doing an event well. When everything clicks, it’s a good feeling. The most challenging part is keeping everybody happy. When we have an event like the Vienna Philharmonic or Yo-Yo Ma – and we have more than 2,000 people in the house – yet we’re able to manage the cafe, the Interlude and its pre-concert event and keep them going; get everything cleaned up for the intermission crowd – which hits us hard as well; do a post-reception for 200 on the same night and we’re able to succeed at it …

I have a great crew. If you have the support of a great crew, you can do just about anything. I have a very loyal staff, and without them, we couldn’t do what we’re doing here. We have so many different people that like food different ways. That’s why at lunch we offer a choice of 10 different side dishes with the sandwiches.

 

Read Next

Life sciences Portrait of the research team posing together.

Minecraft players can now explore whole cells and their contents

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Scientists have translated nanoscale experimental and computational data into precise 3D representations of bacteria, yeast and human epithelial, breast and breast cancer cells in Minecraft, a video game that allows players to explore, build and manipulate structures in three dimensions. The innovation will allow researchers and students of all ages to navigate […]

Arts Photo of seven dancers onstage wearing blue tops and orange or yellow flowing skirts. The backdrop is a Persian design.

February Dance includes works experimenting with live music, technology and a ‘sneaker ballet’

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The dance department at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign will present February Dance 2025: Fast Forward this week at Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. February Dance will be one of the first performances in the newly renovated Colwell Playhouse Theatre since its reopening. The performances are Jan. 30-Feb. 1. Dance professor […]

Honors portraits of four Illinois researchers

Four Illinois researchers receive Presidential Early Career Award

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Four researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign were named recipients of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, the highest honor bestowed by the U.S. government on young professionals at the outset of their independent research careers. The winners this year are health and kinesiology professor Marni Boppart, physics professor Barry Bradlyn, chemical and biomolecular engineering professor Ying […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010