📝 Daily control · ⏱️ 2 min read

How do I use weekly food cost data to plan my menu for the next quarter?

📝 KitchenNmbrs · updated 13 Mar 2026

Weekly food cost data is gold for menu planning. Many restaurant owners plan their menu by gut feeling, but data from recent weeks shows which dishes actually make profit. By systematically analyzing your food costs, you can build a menu for the next quarter that makes both your guests and your bank account happy.

Gather your weekly food cost data

Start by collecting data from the past 8-12 weeks. You need three numbers per dish:

  • Sales volume per week - how many portions of each dish
  • Food cost per portion - what the ingredients actually cost
  • Selling price excl. VAT - what you earn per portion

💡 Example:

Steak over the past 8 weeks:

  • Average 45 portions per week
  • Food cost: €11.20 per portion
  • Selling price: €28.44 excl. VAT (€31.00 incl.)
  • Food cost: 39.4% - too high!

Calculate popularity and profitability

Create an overview of all your dishes in four categories. This is called menu engineering:

  • Stars: Popular AND profitable (food cost under 32%)
  • Plowhorses: Popular but not profitable (food cost above 35%)
  • Puzzles: Not popular but profitable
  • Dogs: Not popular AND not profitable

⚠️ Note:

Popular means: in your top 40% best-selling dishes. Profitable means: food cost under 32% for fine dining, under 28% for casual.

Identify price changes from suppliers

Check which ingredients have become more expensive. Many suppliers quietly raise their prices, especially on:

  • Meat and fish (seasonal fluctuations)
  • Fresh vegetables (depending on harvest)
  • Dairy and eggs (feed costs)
  • Oils and fats (world market prices)

💡 Example price increase:

Beef rose from €18/kg to €22/kg (+22%):

  • Old food cost steak: €9.00
  • New food cost steak: €11.20
  • Food cost rose from 31.6% to 39.4%

Action: Raise selling price or reduce portion size

Plan your new menu composition

Use your data to make strategic choices for the next quarter:

  • Keep Stars: These dishes are perfect, keep them prominent on the menu
  • Adjust Plowhorses: Raise the price or reduce the portion to become profitable
  • Promote Puzzles: Make them more visible on the menu or train staff to recommend them
  • Remove Dogs: Replace with new dishes with better margins

Calculate the impact of menu changes

For each change, calculate what the financial effect will be. A simple formula:

Extra profit per year = Difference in margin × Expected sales × 52 weeks

💡 Example calculation:

Steak price increase from €31 to €35:

  • Extra margin: €3.67 excl. VAT (€35/1.09 - €31/1.09)
  • Expected sales: 40 per week (was 45, 10% decline due to higher price)
  • Extra profit: €3.67 × 40 × 52 = €7,635 per year

Test new dishes with low food cost

Develop 2-3 new dishes that fit the season and have low food cost. Good options for low food cost:

  • Pasta dishes (food cost often 20-25%)
  • Vegetarian options (vegetables cheaper than meat)
  • Seasonal vegetables (cheap when in season)
  • Braised dishes (cheaper cuts of meat)

⚠️ Note:

Test new dishes first as specials before adding them permanently to the menu. This way you see if guests order them without being forced to keep them for months.

How do you plan your menu with weekly data? (step by step)

1

Gather 8 weeks of food cost data

Note per dish: number sold per week, food cost per portion and selling price excl. VAT. Calculate the average food cost percentage over this period.

2

Categorize all dishes

Divide your menu into four groups: Stars (popular + profitable), Plowhorses (popular + not profitable), Puzzles (not popular + profitable) and Dogs (not popular + not profitable).

3

Make adjustments per category

Keep Stars, make Plowhorses more expensive or reduce portion size, promote Puzzles more, replace Dogs with new dishes with better margins.

4

Calculate financial impact

Calculate per change what it yields: difference in margin × expected sales × 52 weeks. This way you see which adjustments yield the most.

5

Test new dishes as specials

Develop 2-3 new dishes with low food cost and test them first as daily specials. Only add the popular ones to the fixed menu.

✨ Pro tip

Check your top 5 best-selling dishes monthly for food cost. If those are good, you have 80% of your profitability under control.

Calculate this yourself?

In the KitchenNmbrs app you can do this in just a few clicks. 7 days free, no credit card.

Try KitchenNmbrs free →

Was this article helpful?

Share this article

WhatsApp LinkedIn

Frequently asked questions

How often should I update my menu planning?

Plan per quarter, but check monthly if supplier price increases affect your food cost. Major changes (new menu) are best done no more than 2x per year.

What if a popular dish isn't profitable?

These are 'Plowhorses'. Raise the price gradually (€1-2 at a time) or reduce the portion. Often you can do a 10-15% price increase without losing much sales.

How many new dishes should I add per quarter?

Maximum 2-3 new dishes per quarter. Too many confuses guests and the kitchen. Test first as a daily special before permanently adding to the menu.

Should I factor in seasons in my planning?

Absolutely. Summer dishes often have different food costs than winter dishes. Plan your menu around seasonal products - they're cheaper and taste better.

How do I prevent my food cost from creeping up?

Check your supplier prices monthly. Many quietly raise their prices. Update your food cost calculations immediately if prices go up.

ℹ️ This article was prepared based on official sources and professional expertise. While we strive for current and accurate information, the content may differ from the most recent regulations. Always consult the official authorities for binding standards.

📚 Sources consulted

Food Standards Agency (FSA) https://www.food.gov.uk

The HACCP standards shown in this application are for informational purposes only. KitchenNmbrs does not guarantee that displayed values are current or complete. Always consult the FSA or your local authority for the latest regulations.

JS

Written by

Jeffrey Smit

Founder & CEO of KitchenNmbrs

Jeffrey Smit built KitchenNmbrs from 8 years of hands-on experience as kitchen manager at 1NUL8 Group in Rotterdam. His mission: give every restaurant owner control over food cost.

🏆 8 years kitchen manager at 1NUL8 Group Rotterdam
Expertise: food cost management HACCP kitchen management restaurant operations food safety compliance

Automate your daily kitchen controls

Manual controls take time and miss errors. KitchenNmbrs automates temperature logging, inventory management, and HACCP checks. Try it free for 14 days.

Start free trial →
Disclaimer & terms of use

Table of Contents

💬 in 𝕏
Stel je vraag!