Recipe costing

Recipe Cost Card Template for Restaurant Menu Items

Standardize recipe cost, yield, allergens, and plating notes so your kitchen and QR menu stay aligned.

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Quick answer

Standardize recipe cost, yield, allergens, and plating notes so your kitchen and QR menu stay aligned.

What this template helps you do

A recipe cost card turns a menu idea into an operating standard. It records the quantities, yield, allergen notes, and cost assumptions that staff need before the item appears on a guest-facing menu.

Best use case

Use it for new menu items, seasonal specials, and items that taste different depending on who preps them. A completed card gives managers one source of truth for kitchen execution and menu publishing.

Recipe cost card example

SectionExample entryOwnerReview triggerMenu impact
Ingredients6 oz chicken, 2 oz slaw, 1 bunChefSupplier changePrice or description
Yield24 portions per batchPrep leadWaste above targetAvailability note
AllergensGluten, eggManagerRecipe editDietary tags
Cost$4.20 per servingOwnerCost above 32%Menu price
Photo notesCut sandwich openMarketingNew platingMenu image

Recipe card quality check

List purchased unit, usable yield, and serving quantity separately.
Record allergens and dietary limitations before publishing the item.
Add plating notes that make the guest photo match the kitchen standard.
Include prep batch size and storage life for make-ahead components.
Name the manager who can approve price or recipe changes.
Link the recipe card review to the live menu update checklist.

Build a reliable recipe card

1

Document the current build

Watch the item being prepared and record the actual quantities used.

2

Calculate serving cost

Use invoice cost and usable yield so the card reflects real kitchen economics.

3

Add guest-facing notes

Translate kitchen details into menu description, allergens, and photo requirements.

4

Review after launch

Compare guest views and staff feedback before locking the item into the core menu.

Keep the menu and kitchen version together

When a recipe changes, update the QR menu description and allergen tags at the same time. Guests should not see an outdated promise after the kitchen has changed the item.

How this connects to your QR menu

Use the finished card to update item descriptions, dietary tags, and photos in FlipMenu. The QR menu becomes the guest-facing version of the same operational truth.

Use the worksheet first, then publish the guest-facing result only after the manager review is complete. That keeps the digital menu useful without turning it into an unapproved operations notebook.

Related FlipMenu workflows

Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers for restaurant owners before switching or signing up.

Next step

Turn this recipe cost card into a live menu update

Create a free FlipMenu QR menu, publish updates without reprinting, and track what guests view after the change.

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