Culinary Strategy Insights
Practical frameworks on menu profitability, operational performance and F&B leadership — written for operators who want results, not theory.
Menu engineering is not a matrix exercise. It is a live operating system that links costing, pricing, procurement, training and menu design into measurable profit growth.
A live operating system linking costing, pricing, procurement, training and menu design into measurable profit growth.
When structured properly, food cost becomes a lever for pricing power, value perception and revenue growth.
Better menu design, bundling and staff behaviour lift revenue per cover without increasing footfall.
Structured staffing frameworks that balance cost efficiency and service quality across different cover levels.
A structured approach to aligning revenue, cost and operating disciplines into one coherent commercial system.
Delivered monthly
Common Questions
Menu engineering is a systematic process of analysing menu items by profitability and popularity, then restructuring presentation, pricing and promotion to drive guests toward higher-margin dishes. It typically achieves 6–8% gross margin improvement without changing what you cook — just how you present, price and position it.
The most effective approach is menu simplification combined with purchase discipline. Reducing menu complexity by 15–25% typically cuts waste, reduces prep complexity and improves consistency. Pairing this with structured supplier relationships and standardised portions can reduce food cost by 3–6% within a quarter.
For most Australian full-service restaurants, 28–34% is a healthy target. Fine dining often runs 30–35% but compensates with higher average spend. Quick service and café concepts should target 25–30%. The more important metric is gross profit per cover, not the percentage in isolation.
Engagements are structured as project-based fixed fees, day rates, or retained advisory arrangements. Project fees for menu strategy and profit system reviews typically range from $5,000 to $25,000+ depending on scope. Every Culinary Strategy engagement starts with a complimentary 30-minute strategy call before any scoping or fees are discussed.
A focused menu engineering review for a single outlet typically runs 3–6 weeks from discovery to final recommendations. Multi-outlet or hotel F&B engagements take 6–12 weeks depending on complexity, number of menus and whether implementation support is included.
Ready to begin
Every engagement starts with a 30-minute discovery call — no obligation, no sales process.