All About LAUSD鈥檚 Iconic Coffee Cake: A Sweet Tradition Dating back to the 1950s
鈥...We make it with love,鈥 said one LAUSD cafeteria manager.
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Whenever April Heinz鈥檚 grown children come back to Los Angeles for a visit, there is one item they crave 鈥 LA Unified’s legendary coffee cake.
鈥淭hey’re now graduated and in college鈥hey came back [for] summer break. I had a couple of slices of coffee cake for them, and they were like, 鈥極h my gosh!鈥… because, you know it’s a famous thing,鈥 said Heinz, a staff member at Marina Del Rey Middle School.
Stories like Heinz鈥檚 are not unique. LAUSD鈥檚 coffee cake is one of the most popular items on the district鈥檚 menu. Every year LA Unified serves up 800,000 slices of the coffee cake a year across 700 cafeterias, according to an LAIST .
The coffee cake recipe dates back to 1954 and has undergone several changes due to federal USDA regulations. Evelen Guirguis, who has been with the district for 30 years and is now the cafeteria manager at Marina del Rey Middle School, said shortening, an ingredient 鈥渉igh in calories and offers no nutritional benefits,鈥 has since been cut out.
Baking more now that you are staying home? Remember the legendary LAUSD Old Fashioned Coffee Cake? Here is the original recipe from 1954. Photo credit: Danielle Chiriguaya.
鈥 Los Angeles Unified (@LASchools)
鈥淏efore, the (ingredients) came from the government. Now we buy everything ourselves.鈥 said Guirguis. 鈥淲e have our own vendor now鈥which] means we get the best [products] and everything is fresh,鈥

The current coffee cake recipe is expected to be updated again in the fall 鈥 because of a new set of federal regulations 鈥 cutting down on sugar.
Meanwhile the iconic cake remains in high demand.
“Even though the fat content has declined, it’s still a very moist cake鈥 big part of nutrition is what you enjoy,鈥 said Manish Singh, director of LAUSD food services.
The district even the recipe during the pandemic, encouraging people to make it while they were home.
Singh said earlier this month the district ordered 3,500 pieces of coffee cake as part of a staff appreciation day and 鈥渋t was all gone in no time,” he said. “We did a similar thing last year. The first time, they ordered 1,000 pieces and were worried there would be leftovers. It was gone in 20 minutes.”
The cake is so popular, it has even inspired businesses like Runaway Sweet Treats in Los Angeles to offer on its menu items using the original recipe. It鈥檚 also a big crowd pleaser on back-to-school night, with parents waiting in long lines to get a slice.
LAUSD Superintendent Alberto M. Carvalho is also a big fan, requesting it for monthly principals鈥 meetings.
When a student reporter with several boxes of coffee cake returned to the University of Southern California campus, a security guard recognized the packaging and asked for a piece.
The recipe is not the only thing that has changed. With the decrease in cafeteria-produced food, some schools have contracted the production process to a third-party vendor. The cake is still made from scratch in 25-30 school kitchens, Singh said.
鈥淲here we have the capacity, and where the staff is able to make it from scratch, we still encourage them to make it from scratch,鈥 Singh said.

Guirguis is one of the many passionate individuals behind the creation of the legendary cake. Once a week, she and her staff bake nearly 600 coffee cakes before breakfast at 7:45 AM for the students at Marina del Rey Middle School and seven other LAUSD campuses.
From start to finish, it only takes her 30 minutes to bake two trays of fresh coffee cake. Baking the cake, she said, is her favorite part of her job.
When asked why the coffee cake is so popular, Guirguis said, 鈥淚t’s because we make it with love.鈥
Learn how to make the legendary treat below:
Los Angeles Unified School District鈥檚 coffee cake is one of the most popular items on the district鈥檚 menu. Learn more about the 70 year old tradition, and see the full recipe, at The74million.org
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