Run Your Kitchen Like a Restaurant and Cut Your Food Bill (2024)

Britain wastes more food than any other European country and most of that waste happens at home.If a restaurant owner carried on the way many of us do, their Michelin-starred establishment, tea-shop or chippie would go bust.

Run Your Kitchen Like a Restaurant and Cut Your Food Bill (1)

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Just as we scour the aisles of Lidl, Morissons and Asda for value, so they ring around different suppliers to get the best quality at the best price. But good ‘sourcing’ is only one trick to keeping food costs down.

Here are a few tricks from the catering professionals.

Buy bigger

Many restaurants buy animal carcasses – sometimes directly from the farmer – and whole fish to butcher or fillet themselves. I’m not suggesting you get out your hacksaw and start cutting up whole lambs in front of the kids, but buying meat in larger units will save you money.

This is what your canny great-grandmother did; she bought a ham or tongue, boiled or roasted it and sliced to order for meals and sandwiches all week. Or she minced steak and made her own rissoles. Yes, it’s more work but more economical than, say, vacuum-packed ham slices or ready-made burgers.

When buying meat, fish and poultry, the more skilled labour, preparation and cooking that has taken place, the more you pay. You pay proportionately much more for chicken breasts than a whole chicken which is one reason I never buy them.

So google how to boil a ham or joint a chicken or treat yourself to a cookery course. Consider investing in a vacuum packing kit and making your own transparent parcels of sliced meats for the freezer.

Run Your Kitchen Like a Restaurant and Cut Your Food Bill (2)

Conduct a food waste audit

To ensure they make enough profit, restaurant owners will audit every aspect of their operation:

  • Are customers regularly leaving chips on their plates? Serve smaller portions.
  • Are burnt croissants regularly thrown in the bin? Get that sharp oven recalibrated or buy a new one.

At home, monitor what’s scraped off your family’s plates and what’s chucked out generally. While leftover chips and pasta (not off people’s plates) can be made into other dishes such as potato omelettes and pasta salads, it’s better not to have the problem.

A 75g-100g portion of pasta is enough for an adult and WeightWatchers consider 60g a large portion so perhaps your waste audit will become a waist audit.

Bread and salad are the items we waste most

Bread, pittas, hot cross buns and the like freeze well, so slice up on day one and put half or more in the freezer. Use as required; pop in the defrost slot of your toaster or leave out to thaw.

Stale white bread makes great croutons. Chop into chunks, coat with vegetable or garlic oil and oven-bake for 10 minutes at 180C until golden. Put a timer on as they burn easily.

Firmer unwashed salads like cos, little gem, radicchio and chicory keep far better than expensive bags of ready-washed leaves. Cucumbers go squashy fast once cut. Maybe buy a half cuke instead of a whole one whatever the price. Experiment with frozen, rather than fresh spinach.

And today’s special is…

At a restaurant, today’s specials are planned around what needs using up. If you have onions, yesterday’s baguette plus cheese, your special is French onion soup with cheese croutons.

Before bringing in more supplies, do what chefs do and check your stores. If you have a freezer full, don’t go shopping this weekend. Start eating down that freezer by making a decision on what to defrost come Friday. Food keeps in a freezer but it doesn’t improve.

Planning for the week

A restaurant will plan for the day it’s closed and for extra covers on a busy Friday night and so should you. If your family contains teenagers whose comings and goings are unpredictable, never fill the fridge with just-in-case ready meals. Let them eat old-fashioned ready meals like eggs, cheese or beans on toast using bread taken from the freezer.

Related posts:

  • How I Plan My Supermarket Shop
  • Tasty Ways to Use Up Leftover Beef
  • Stop Being Seduced by Supermarket Tricks

Stock control

It’s not rocket science to make a note when something goes into the fridge or freezer and when something gets used up. I’m too lazy to label frozen foods (preferring to sniff them) but I know what I’ve got. Lidded jars or plastic cartons are better than mysterious covered containers because you can see what’s inside.

Storage secrets

What kind of a restaurant chef would pay for the best produce then throw half of it away? Learn better storage. Put your spring onions root down into a tumbler of water (like cut flowers), wrap fresh herbs like parsley in moistened kitchen paper, then tightly in cling film and put in the salad compartment. Take anything that sweats out of the plastic.

It’s a false economy to buy too many washed carrots and potatoes because they’re often still wet. Remove from plastic and dry at once. If you can face the scrubbing, ‘dirty’ carrots or potatoes keep far longer.

Freezer savvy

The freezer is the restaurant’s and your greatest friend. More foods will freeze than you might expect – butter, grated cheese, fresh yeast, bread dough, chunks of fresh ginger, half cans of leftover cannellini beans, fresh thyme, parsley stalks and leek ends for stock and those spare portions of spag bol you’ve lovingly shopped for and cooked.

How do you prevent food waste at your house? Any good tips?

Sally-Jayne Wright is a food journalist and freelance writer who loves to cook and loves a bargain. The credit crunch of 2007/8 had a knock-on effect on herincomewhich is when shetook a long hard look at heroutgoings from hairdressing costs to food bills. Herfrugal habits have stayed put.

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Run Your Kitchen Like a Restaurant and Cut Your Food Bill (2024)

FAQs

Is it cheaper to cook or eat out? ›

Is It Cheaper to Cook or Eat Out? For those who want a quick and easy answer: It's generally cheaper to cook food at home than eat out.

Is eating at home healthier than eating out? ›

It's proven to be healthier

Some studies suggest that people who cook more often, rather than get take-out, have an overall healthier diet. These studies also show that restaurant meals typically contain higher amounts of sodium, saturated fat, total fat, and overall calories than home-cooked meals.

How many cooks for 50 people? ›

This number can vary depending on the complexity of your restaurant's menu and the size of the kitchen, but the average is four back of house staff members per 50 tables in a casual seated restaurant. This average number of staff members includes chefs and prep cooks in the back of house setting.

Why is homemade food better than restaurant food? ›

Home cooked food is healthier than fast food or takeout. The nutritional value of the produce used will be maintained when you cook at home. Usually, the takeout that you order will have a lot of oil, butter and spices which might not be healthy, especially when eaten on a daily basis.

Is McDonald's cheaper than cooking? ›

Fast food is typically much more expensive than home cooked from scratch and people have very confused ideas about this.

Does eating at home save money? ›

Eating out can be expensive because you're paying for not only the food but also the service, location and convenience too. But when you cook at home, you can buy ingredients in bulk for cost-effective shopping, plan meals ahead of time, and make use of leftovers, which can all help to save you money.

Is takeout every day unhealthy? ›

Eating out can often include high-calorie, processed, and fatty fast food or restaurant meals. Excessive consumption of such nutrients can cause chronic diseases such as obesity, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes.

What is the average cost of a homemade meal? ›

The average price per serving of home cooked meals is $4.31 – while the average cost of eating out is $20.37.

Why homemade food is better than fast food? ›

One of the primary benefits of home-cooked meals is the control they provide. When you cook at home, you have complete control over what goes into your food, including the quality of ingredients, the amount of salt, sugar, and fat, and the cooking methods used.

How many potatoes to feed 50 people? ›

How Much Food to Serve at a Party
FOODSERVE 25SERVE 50
Meats
Lettuce for salad (heads)510
Peas (fresh)12 pounds25 pounds
Potatoes9 pounds18 pounds
35 more rows
Apr 1, 2024

How many tables should a waitress have? ›

In a fine dining establishment, a server typically serves 3-4 tables at a time. Serving more than this can lead to a decline in the quality of service provided to each table, as the server may become overwhelmed and unable to give each table the attention it needs.

What age group cooks at home the most? ›

According to a survey we conducted of over 1000 US households, we found that 95% of millennials (age group 18-29) cook weekly at home, compared with 92% of those aged 30-44 and 93% of those aged 45-59.

What defines junk food? ›

Key facts. 'Junk food' is food that contains high levels of fats, salt or sugar, and lacks nutrients such as fibre, vitamins and minerals. Reading nutritional information labels and following the Health Star Ratings system can help you make healthy food choices.

Why do people prefer home-made food? ›

Homemade food is hygienic

A meal prepared at home is way more hygienic than a restaurant meal. Homemade food is prepared in clean surroundings with utmost care. We cannot be sure about the hygiene levels in the restaurant kitchens. Eating more homemade food can reduce your risk of contracting foodborne illnesses.

Is it cheaper for one person to eat out or cook? ›

It depends on the individual's lifestyle and food choices. Eating out may seem more convenient, but it can be costly in the long run. On the other hand, cooking at home takes time and effort but can save money and improve overall health.

How much cheaper is it to cook your own meals? ›

It is 5 times more expensive to order delivery from a restaurant than it is to cook at home. Meal kits are 3 times more expensive than cooking from scratch. When cooking at home, you'll save most money on carb-based meals (vs eating them at a restaurant).

How much money can you save by not eating out? ›

If you are like us, or like the typical American family, just cutting one meal out per week can save you $520-$1560 per year! Here are some things that have helped us to significantly lower our eating out budget: 1. Plan a Menu.

How much more expensive is eating out than eating in? ›

According to the point-of-sale company BNG, the food industry follows a standard cost-to-menu price formula of 28% to 32%. That means restaurants charge at least double — often much more — for any given item on the menu. The markup from wholesale is typically about 300%.

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