I'm not rich enough to buy the 2,30 eurodollar vegan option. That's just grains, that should cost 50 cents at most! To beat the system, I will now instead buy the 4 eurodollar meat option
I'm not rich enough to buy the 2,30 eurodollar vegan option. That's just grains, that should cost 50 cents at most! To beat the system, I will now instead buy the 4 eurodollar meat option
many such cases
Always grinds my gears that there's no discount for asking no meat when that's generally the most expensive ingredient.
Friend works as a chef and explained that they started having salads and other vegan meals at appropriate prices but people rarely ordered them. They actually overheard people say things in the line of "it can't be good if it's that cheap". After raising prices people ordered way more.
Thats fucking depressing
Some chain restaurants seem to adopt some sort of "slight discount for the vegan option" variable, I assume due to this, which I'm sure they make even more margins on than the meat versions if only because a lot of vegan substitute meat keeps a lot better than it's meat-meat counterparts and you have less write-off to compensate for.
I think for anything non-chain it's mostly small business tyrant ideology where they either add a sin tax to vegan food because they're mad as fuck at having to do it to stay in business or, and I think this is the majority of them, all price and cost calculations are entirely vibes based anyhow and since we all know vegan is expensive, surcharge it is. I base this entirely on the fact that whenever you find vegan food that isn't purposefully vegan, because the dish just is, they never charge extra and this translates across all cuisines I've ever tried in a gastro establishment.
Small carveout here for people who realize vegans are shit-outta-luck some places and then charge extra, which I think is shitty, but at least makes economical sense. Feels more honest.
On the other hand, sometimes I stumble across a vegan option at a restaurant I would never expect to have them and they seem to take some sort of "we keep some packets of vegan protein in the freezer and whenever somebody actually orders this we just dump the whole package in" approach which leads to things like getting 25 falafels on your bowl.
Yeah the ones that stick out in my mind are the items listed as veggie but they do wild things like putting broccoli and cauliflower in the burrito, like they're either openly antagonistic or gave it so little thought they just spend 5 seconds thinking "What do these people enjoy? Yeah just grab whatever is green idk and then charge them .50 cents less."
I knew one person who justified additional cost for vegan options because the volume of sales was relatively low but he felt it added a bunch of complexity because he made efforts in the back of house to respect that vegan options stayed “sterile” (separate vegan cookware, one fryer solely for vegan options, etc)
I dunno how realistic that is on impact of bottom line but I did appreciate that he did that. I think vibes based is the right thing to call it, I’m sure he didn’t run an analysis of the cost of having all fryers universal vs decreased stock costs. Of course lacking creativity and loading your “vegan” options with expensive shit like impossible and beyond that costs more than meat doesn’t help (and is also technically not vegan even if it is labeled as such because it relied on animal testing to quickly get soy leghemoglobin approved for human consumption)
I know it’s pretty nitpicky but I’m sure a lot of restaurants that serve cauliflower “wings” just throw them in the same fryer as the chicken wings. then people make them at home and wonder why they don’t taste the same? Because you didn’t fry them in oil flavored with chicken fat
The vegan hotdogs at IKEA (at least in Spain) are about half the price of the meat ones, feels good