Uploaded by CATHERINE MOTAS

THE 203 Variety of Menu

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C Y C L I C A L
S E Z I T R E P P A
A P P E T I Z E R S
CATHERINE I. MOTAS
Prof. NINEVETCH GRACE O. MARCO
• Enumerate the varieties of menu
• Identify the different varieties of
menus
The type of menus chosen in the
establishments are based on
number of factors, including
pricing considerations, location,
type of customers and hours of
operation.
Characteristics
À la carte (ah le cart)
This is a French word and means (“According to
the Card or Customer’s Order) is a menu on
which each food item or beverage is priced and
served separately. Typically, an a la carte menu
is for a specific meal, such as lunch or dinner.
• It provides a choice of dishes within each specific
course.
• Each dish is priced separately.
• It gives a full list of all dishes that may be prepared
by the establishment.
• Dishes are prepared and cooked as per order.
• Guests are billed as per the order placed.
• A certain waiting time has to be allowed for
preparation and serving of dishes.
Disdvantages
Advantages
• Customers have extensive choose to choose
from.
• Customers have to pay only for the dishes
ordered.
• Need of children,
old, aged and others can be catered to!.
• Freshly cooked food is offered.
• Needs more kitchen space, kitchen and
service equipment.
• requires more kitchen staff.
• work load of the kitchen and service staff is
not evenly distributed.
• More food wastage is there.
• Food Cost cannot be controlled as the
customers preferences cannot be predicted!.
Characteristics
California menu
is a single menu listing breakfast, lunch, and
dinner foods. It offers customers the freedom
to choose any item at any time of day.
• California menus are especially popular
with food service establishments that are
open 24 hours. They are also used for hotel
room service.
• This accommodates a wider variety of guests
who may differ in lifestyle and work
schedules.
Characteristics
• It can be an insert in the standard menu,
written on a blackboard, or described
verbally by the service staff.
Du jour (doo-ZHEUR)
This is a French term that means “of the
day.” This menu simply lists the menu
items that are available on a particular
day.
• Sometimes restaurant has only one or two
daily specials that are made just for that
day
Characteristics
Prix fixe (PREE FIX)
This type of menu offers guests multiple
courses for a single set price. This type of
menu arrangement presents a win-win
for both guest and operation
• The operation ensures a higher check total by
bundling multiple courses together, while the
guest receives a discount on that higher total.
Both casual and formal operations utilize prix
fixe menus.
• Most of the time the price of a prix fixe menu
is relatively low because it reduces production
costs by allowing the kitchen to operate at a set
pace and flow.
Characteristics
Table d’hôte (tah-buhl doHT)
This menu is similar to a prix fixe menu in
that it bundles various elements of the
menu into one package
• For example, such a menu might present—in
advance—four meals, and each would include a
number of courses and possibly even beverages, all
for one price. Banquets frequently offer such a
menu.
• diners might choose in advance from four meals:
beef, chicken, fish, or vegetarian. Each meal would
include an appetizer, a salad, rolls, a main course,
a dessert, and coffee or tea. Individual meals might
be priced separately.
A. BANQUETS
• Offers a selection of fixed items given at a set price. However in some special
occasions the food can be served according to guest’s preferences.
A. BUFFETS
• Considered table d’hote due to limited offerings of food items at a predetermined
set price. The dishes are available at a set time, however the food items are very
depending on the occasion and operational cost.
Advantages
Disdvantages
• Less kitchen space is required
• limited kitchen and service equipment are requ
ired
• Less labor is required as the numbers of dishes
are limited.
• Less food storage space required.
• Food wastage is minimal.
• Food lost easier to control!
• Choice for the customer is limited.
• Fixed amount has to be paid irrespec
-tive of the dishes consumed.
• Need of children, old, aged and
others cannot be catered to.
Characteristics
Cyclical Menu
With this menu, chefs or managers
change items after a certain period of
time.
• For example, a cyclical menu (also called a cycle
menu) might repeat after three weeks, al- though
the time between cycles may vary based on seasonal
availability of ingredients and other factors.
• Longer-term cyclical menus are particularly suited
for institutions such as hospitals, schools, and
cafeterias where the same people are being served
each day.
• Weekly cyclical menus are particularly suited to
family, casual, and neighborhood restaurants.
Advantages
Disdvantages
• Effective cost control.
• Stocking of unnecessary goods is
avoided.
• Less storage space for perishables is required.
• Less food wastage.
• Well planned labor requirement.
• Fewer cooking equipment required
• Choice for the customer is not here.
• Frequency of repetition of dishes is
higher.
• Extensive knowledge is required for
the preparation and service of number of
dishes.
Characteristics
Fixed
This menu offers the same items every
day. A particular advantage here is that
guests know what to expect every time
they return.
• Many chefs work with a fixed
menu to offer guests consistency,
but then supplement the fixed
menu with a du jour menu to
offer variety.
Characteristics
Limited
There are typically only a few items
offered on a limited menu. Quick-service
operations frequently offer a limited
menu.
• For example, a restaurant might offer a
limited menu of four sandwiches, two soups,
and a salad for lunch.
• Such a menu makes it easy to keep track of
costs because there are fewer ingredients to
account for, and those ingredients are usually
the same through inventory cycles, making it
easier to track and monitor pricing.
Characteristics
Limited Time Offer (LTO)
These menu items are only offered for a
short period of time. LTOs are most
popular with quick-service and casualdining operations.
• LTOs allow for the marketing of
seasonal food or introduction of new
menu ideas and concepts. It is a lowrisk way to test new ideas while
increasing guest loyalty and keeping
interest.
Identify the art and
science of meal
management.
MEAL MANAGEMENT
--Involves planning, organizing, controlling and
evaluating the meal service.
--is both an art and a science. It requires more
than just knowledge of the food being prepared
and the methods of preparation.
• Culinary Science the study about the chemical
composition of food and food ingredients, their
physical, biological and biochemical properties
and the interaction of food constituents with
each other and their environment.
• Molecular Gastronomy is centered on scientific principles and
its use and improvement on micro level food preparation.
• Has a scientific basis and techniques .
• Are experimental and it also developed trial and error process.
• And it is also an economic status of an individual to try new
and innovative food items
A chef is like a connoisseur, when the food is plated by him
in fine dining which looks like a piece of an art that
sometimes is beyond human explanation.
The beauty lies in the versatility of the ingredient, when
different chefs hold different colours of ingredients in their
hands, each one creates different art pieces.
Francois de la
Rochefoucauld
References:
http://mrfischerswaogoculinaryarts.weebly.com/uploads/2/3/0/9/230
99744/planning_a_menu.pdf
https://textbooks.restaurant.org/Textbooks/media/fmrca/FRMCA2_L0
2_Ch02.pdf
https://www.ihmnotes.in/assets/Docs/Sem-2/F&b%20DOne/CH1,%20Meal%20and%20Menu%20Planning.pdf
https://www.hospitality-school.com/types-menus-restaurant/
https://www.shiksha.com/hospitality-travel/culinaryarts/articles/culinary-an-art-and-science-in-the-modern-kitchen-blogId20221
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