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Andrew Shults
Wine geek
93
Wed Jul 05, 2006 6:32 am
Chicago, Illinois, USA
wrcstl wrote:MSN has a fluff piece on restaurants and wrote
"At a fine-dining restaurant, the average cost of food is 38% to 42% of the menu price, says Kevin Moll, the CEO and president of National Food Service Advisors. In other words, most restaurants are making roughly 60% on anything they serve."
Now I don't have a problem with that and if the food is really good would be willing to pay more. I was actually surprised the margins were not higher. So why do I pay 300% mark up on wine. This was not discussed in the article. My daughter is doing a graduation lunch for her husband in NYC this weekend. The 3 course lunch is $29, very reasonable. They have an extensive wine list and Druet NV from New Mexico is $45 and I buy it locally for $13.99 per. That is at least 400% of wholesale. Why not raise some food prices and stop raping the wine people. Thank goodness I live in St. Louis and can BYOB good wine from the cellar. Realize I am kicking a dead horse but it is just irritating.
Walt
Dale Williams
Compassionate Connoisseur
11427
Tue Mar 21, 2006 4:32 pm
Dobbs Ferry, NY (NYC metro)
Andrew Shults wrote:wrcstl wrote:MSN has a fluff piece on restaurants and wrote
"At a fine-dining restaurant, the average cost of food is 38% to 42% of the menu price, says Kevin Moll, the CEO and president of National Food Service Advisors. In other words, most restaurants are making roughly 60% on anything they serve."
Now I don't have a problem with that and if the food is really good would be willing to pay more. I was actually surprised the margins were not higher. So why do I pay 300% mark up on wine. This was not discussed in the article. My daughter is doing a graduation lunch for her husband in NYC this weekend. The 3 course lunch is $29, very reasonable. They have an extensive wine list and Druet NV from New Mexico is $45 and I buy it locally for $13.99 per. That is at least 400% of wholesale. Why not raise some food prices and stop raping the wine people. Thank goodness I live in St. Louis and can BYOB good wine from the cellar. Realize I am kicking a dead horse but it is just irritating.
Walt
I'll risk being a devil's advocate for a moment:
First, a margin of 60% is equal to a 250% markup, so the markup on wine is larger than food, but not amazingly larger. Second, restaurants have been geared toward making a higher margin on all beverages, not just wine. Have you compared the cost of a Coke/Pepsi to the restaurant price lately?
On the other hand, it is irritating to find something on the wine list you know you could get much cheaper by yourself (one reason some wines are designated on-premises only), and sometimes markups are downright excessive.
Restaurants need to turn a profit and will opt for the strategies that work best for them. Thankfully, some restaurants find that liberal BYO policies or smaller markups can work, and I am happy to support their choices with my cash.
Brian Gilp wrote:http://www.thecrossingatcaseyjones.com/files/file/TheCrossing_WineList.pdf
Just need to step in and defend that not all restaurants follow the same pricing policies. The link is to a local restaurant wine list that is quite diverse and very resonable. For the same $45 you can have a Pierre Peters or if you still want the Gruet it is only $16. If one looks closely there are even wines on the list below local retail.
John Tomasso wrote:That is terribly misleading. Many math challenged readers will not stop to consider Dale's excellent points; that out of the remaining revenue once food cost is handled, every other expense of the restaurant must be paid.
Andrew Shults wrote:First, a margin of 60% is equal to a 250% markup, so the markup on wine is larger than food
John Tomasso wrote:In other words, most restaurants are making roughly 60% on anything they serve.
That is terribly misleading. Many math challenged readers will not stop to consider Dale's excellent points; that out of the remaining revenue once food cost is handled, every other expense of the restaurant must be paid.
In my experience, labor cost usually equals or exceeds food cost, so right off the bat, they're not making 60%, they're making 30%. Now the fun starts......advertising, state and local compliance costs, equipment upkeep, utilities, rent, insurance.
So, now how much do you think is left?
David M. Bueker
Childless Cat Dad
34948
Thu Mar 23, 2006 11:52 am
Connecticut
Brian Gilp wrote:http://www.thecrossingatcaseyjones.com/files/file/TheCrossing_WineList.pdf
Just need to step in and defend that not all restaurants follow the same pricing policies. The link is to a local restaurant wine list that is quite diverse and very resonable. For the same $45 you can have a Pierre Peters or if you still want the Gruet it is only $16. If one looks closely there are even wines on the list below local retail.
Brian K Miller
Passionate Arboisphile
9340
Fri Aug 25, 2006 1:05 am
Northern California
Brian K Miller wrote:I know I try to bring my own wine. I cannot afford to drink a nice California Cabernet Sauvignon when it is $150 on the wine list and $50 in the retail store. Even with a $15 corkage-you do the math!
Sadly, my little suburb lost our great little temple of quality cooking. fantastic food, but a horrible location (a dying, ugly strip mall space where the air conditioner doesn't even work very well). They, for some arcane reason I never fully understood, had never obtained their ABC license, so it was free BYOB! RIP, Fuzed Cafe.
wrcstl wrote: With that mark up I NEVER buy wine. 200% on a wine ordered would far exceed 400% of a wine never ordered. Could it be possible that with a more reasonable mark-up and treating wine more like food instead of a cocktail that the overall margin may improve, not to say anything about the more satisfying experience?
wrcstl wrote:John,
You are missing my point
Mark Lipton wrote:wrcstl wrote: With that mark up I NEVER buy wine. 200% on a wine ordered would far exceed 400% of a wine never ordered. Could it be possible that with a more reasonable mark-up and treating wine more like food instead of a cocktail that the overall margin may improve, not to say anything about the more satisfying experience?
Walt,
At the risk of flogging a dead horse: large restaurant markups are a result of several factors, such as the low profit margin that many restaurants have for their food service, the pervasive attitude among many that wine is a luxury and hence can be inflated and the related attitude that wine is not an intrinsic part of the meal. Friends of mine in Europe relate stories of wine-friendly restaurants (not common there either) that charge a set markup on wines rather than a proportional one. So, maybe they charge a set $15 over the retail price of the wine. The result is that there is an incentive to order a more costly wine off the list, knowing that you're getting it closer to retail.
Mark Lipton
Covert wrote:Some restaurateur somewhere must have done a comparison, first by marking wine up the usual two or three times, and later selling it nearer retail prices to see if volume would increase to where profits were higher. I bet it would not, because the typical person I see ordering wine in a restaurant is not wine knowledgeable, and is just doing what he thinks he should do regarding having wine with dinner; i.e., drinking something costing $40, whether he could buy it in a retail store for $15 or not. He probably wouldn't go to a restaurant any more often if the wine prices were cheaper; when he did go back, he would just order better wine for $40 without even realizing he was getting a bargain (and probably not like the wine as well - but that is another subject).
Others, who order the expensive wines, are often on expense accounts and trying to impress someone by big spending. They also don't know much about what they are drinking and just look for anything costing around $200. Wine knowledgeable folks often bring their own bottle and pay a corkage fee, which would be roughly equal to a retail-sized markup.
If my observations are close to being accurate, wine pricing as it normally exists probably makes the most economic sense.
David M. Bueker
Childless Cat Dad
34948
Thu Mar 23, 2006 11:52 am
Connecticut
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