Quick answer
Use these portion count menu modifier examples to structure choose serving count choices for tourist restaurant menus, including single as the default choice, price display guidance, mobile display rules, translation risk, allergen caution, and staff cues.
Why these menu modifier examples matter
Portion Count Menu Modifier Examples for Tourist Restaurant help tourist-facing restaurants turn a confusing list of choices into a scannable QR menu modifier group. The practical option group name is "Choose serving count". The option strategy is: Use counts when guests need to understand pieces, portions, or group size before choosing.
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 tourist restaurant menus, the guest decision need is to understand unfamiliar dish names, ingredients, photos, and translations.
The options in this example are: Single | Two pieces | Four pieces | Six pieces | Half tray | Full tray | Serves 2 | Serves 4. The default choice is Single. The price display guidance is: Show each serving count as a clear price, especially for catering and shareable items. The mobile display rule is: Put serving count above optional add-ons because it changes the scale of the item. The translation risk is: Piece count and serving count are safer than vague words like small platter or large tray. The allergen caution is: Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. The analytics signal is: For catering and family menus, item views can show whether serving-count clarity reduces back-and-forth.
Use this structure when tourist-facing restaurants 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.
Portion Count modifier group anatomy
| Option | Role | Price display | Mobile display | Translation note | Allergen caution | Staff cue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single | Default choice | Included default | Show in the first visible rows on mobile | Translate single with plain ingredient or portion context | Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. | Point travelers to the option group before explaining every ingredient verbally. |
| Two pieces | Optional choice | Keep included when it is a standard swap | Show in the first visible rows on mobile | Translate two pieces with plain ingredient or portion context | Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. | Point travelers to the option group before explaining every ingredient verbally. |
| Four pieces | Optional choice | Use a manager-reviewed price note | Show in the first visible rows on mobile | Translate four pieces with plain ingredient or portion context | Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. | Point travelers to the option group before explaining every ingredient verbally. |
| Six pieces | Optional choice | Show as + price if it changes cost | Keep compact below required choices | Translate six pieces with plain ingredient or portion context | Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. | Point travelers to the option group before explaining every ingredient verbally. |
| Half tray | Optional choice | Keep included when it is a standard swap | Keep compact below required choices | Translate half tray with plain ingredient or portion context | Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. | Point travelers to the option group before explaining every ingredient verbally. |
| Full tray | Optional choice | Use a manager-reviewed price note | Keep compact below required choices | Translate full tray with plain ingredient or portion context | Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. | Point travelers to the option group before explaining every ingredient verbally. |
| Serves 2 | Optional choice | Show as + price if it changes cost | Keep compact below required choices | Translate serves 2 with plain ingredient or portion context | Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. | Point travelers to the option group before explaining every ingredient verbally. |
| Serves 4 | Optional choice | Keep included when it is a standard swap | Keep compact below required choices | Translate serves 4 with plain ingredient or portion context | Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. | Point travelers to the option group before explaining every ingredient verbally. |
How to adapt the group for tourist restaurant menus
Start with the guest's first decision. In this case, choose serving count 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 Single visible, then keep the remaining choices short enough for a phone screen.
For tourist restaurant operations, the update trigger is translation review, dish-photo updates, and seasonal local specials. 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.
Portion Count modifier checklist
Build the portion count group
Name the choice in guest language
Use Choose serving count or a direct equivalent so guests understand the choice before opening every item detail.
Pick the default before listing upgrades
Single should be visible as the default so guests know what happens if they do not choose another option.
Add prices only where they matter
Show each serving count as a clear price, especially for catering and shareable items.
Check mobile and translation clarity
Put serving count above optional add-ons because it changes the scale of the item. Also review translation risk: Piece count and serving count are safer than vague words like small platter or large tray.
Publish, train, and monitor
Point travelers to the option group before explaining every ingredient verbally. Then watch this signal: For catering and family menus, item views can show whether serving-count clarity reduces back-and-forth.
Use modifier groups carefully
A modifier group can make tourist restaurant menus easier to scan, but it should not replace staff judgment or ingredient review. Larger portions may combine sauces, sides, or garnishes that change allergen review. Use cautious wording and have the restaurant owner approve the final options before publishing.
Build the live menu around these choices
Related examples
Catering Platter item examples
See how the related item card can present the same choices without overloading the description.
Catering Packages section examples
See where this modifier choice fits in a broader QR menu section.
Menu item examples
Browse single item-card examples that connect descriptions, photos, tags, and modifiers.