Delivered monthly

Strategy and tools for serious operators.
No noise.

Common Questions

What operators ask
most often

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.