Quick answer
Use these crust choice menu modifier examples to structure choose crust choices for catering and private event menus, including classic crust as the default choice, price display guidance, mobile display rules, translation risk, allergen caution, and staff cues.
Why these menu modifier examples matter
Crust Choice Menu Modifier Examples for Catering and Event help catering and event teams turn a confusing list of choices into a scannable QR menu modifier group. The practical option group name is "Choose crust". The option strategy is: Make crust differences concrete with thickness, size, or dietary context.
This page is not a menu item example, a menu section example, a menu description rewrite, or a restaurant menu template. It focuses on reusable modifier group structure: options, default choice, price display, mobile display, translation risk, allergen caution, staff cue, and analytics signal. For catering and private event menus, the guest decision need is to understand serving count, package contents, dietary notes, and event timing.
The options in this example are: Classic crust | Thin crust | Thick crust | Gluten-free crust | Stuffed crust | Cauliflower crust | Crispy edge | Well-done crust. The default choice is Classic crust. The price display guidance is: Use + prices for specialty crusts and make size limits clear. The mobile display rule is: Place crust before topping groups on pizza pages because it changes the base item. The translation risk is: Crust styles and gluten-free wording should be translated literally and checked by the owner. The allergen caution is: Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. The analytics signal is: If pizza pages get high views but low action, crust and size uncertainty may be part of the friction.
Use this structure when catering and event teams need a display-only menu that shows choices clearly while staying focused on public menu presentation. FlipMenu can help publish the live QR menu and show guest engagement, while the restaurant remains responsible for ingredient review, staff training, and final menu wording.
Crust Choice modifier group anatomy
| Option | Role | Price display | Mobile display | Translation note | Allergen caution | Staff cue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classic crust | Default choice | Included default | Show in the first visible rows on mobile | Translate classic crust with plain ingredient or portion context | Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. | Make the group match the event order sheet so managers and guests use the same terms. |
| Thin crust | Optional choice | Keep included when it is a standard swap | Show in the first visible rows on mobile | Translate thin crust with plain ingredient or portion context | Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. | Make the group match the event order sheet so managers and guests use the same terms. |
| Thick crust | Optional choice | Use a manager-reviewed price note | Show in the first visible rows on mobile | Translate thick crust with plain ingredient or portion context | Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. | Make the group match the event order sheet so managers and guests use the same terms. |
| Gluten-free crust | Optional choice | Show as + price if it changes cost | Keep compact below required choices | Translate gluten-free crust with plain ingredient or portion context | Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. | Make the group match the event order sheet so managers and guests use the same terms. |
| Stuffed crust | Optional choice | Keep included when it is a standard swap | Keep compact below required choices | Translate stuffed crust with plain ingredient or portion context | Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. | Make the group match the event order sheet so managers and guests use the same terms. |
| Cauliflower crust | Optional choice | Use a manager-reviewed price note | Keep compact below required choices | Translate cauliflower crust with plain ingredient or portion context | Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. | Make the group match the event order sheet so managers and guests use the same terms. |
| Crispy edge | Optional choice | Show as + price if it changes cost | Keep compact below required choices | Translate crispy edge with plain ingredient or portion context | Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. | Make the group match the event order sheet so managers and guests use the same terms. |
| Well-done crust | Optional choice | Keep included when it is a standard swap | Keep compact below required choices | Translate well-done crust with plain ingredient or portion context | Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. | Make the group match the event order sheet so managers and guests use the same terms. |
How to adapt the group for catering and private event menus
Start with the guest's first decision. In this case, choose crust should answer a real question before the guest asks staff. If every option is equally visible, the menu can feel like a form. If the default is hidden, guests may assume the item is incomplete. The better pattern is to make Classic crust visible, then keep the remaining choices short enough for a phone screen.
For catering and event operations, the update trigger is package revisions, event menu approval, serving-count changes, and allergen review. That means modifier groups should be reviewed when prices change, options sell out, translated labels are updated, or staff report repeated guest questions. Keep the language practical: a modifier group should help guests understand the public menu, not become a private kitchen configuration sheet.
When the group is live in a QR menu, connect it to item photos, section order, and analytics. If guests repeatedly view the related item but do not continue exploring the menu, the option names may be unclear. If guests ask the same question after scanning, the mobile display rule should be adjusted before adding even more options.
Crust Choice modifier checklist
Build the crust choice group
Name the choice in guest language
Use Choose crust or a direct equivalent so guests understand the choice before opening every item detail.
Pick the default before listing upgrades
Classic crust should be visible as the default so guests know what happens if they do not choose another option.
Add prices only where they matter
Use + prices for specialty crusts and make size limits clear.
Check mobile and translation clarity
Place crust before topping groups on pizza pages because it changes the base item. Also review translation risk: Crust styles and gluten-free wording should be translated literally and checked by the owner.
Publish, train, and monitor
Make the group match the event order sheet so managers and guests use the same terms. Then watch this signal: If pizza pages get high views but low action, crust and size uncertainty may be part of the friction.
Use modifier groups carefully
A modifier group can make catering and private event menus easier to scan, but it should not replace staff judgment or ingredient review. Wheat, dairy, egg, and shared oven contact may apply even when the crust sounds simple. Use cautious wording and have the restaurant owner approve the final options before publishing.
Build the live menu around these choices
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