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by lorenzhs
3654 days ago
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The cost of the ingredients will still be pretty low compared to the overall price you pay. A bacon and egg sandwich is about as cheap as it gets to make. It's the time to prepare and serve the food (i.e., staff time) and the time you spend there (i.e., customers per hour → rent) that are the bigger factors. |
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And there's nothing frozen and you won't find any microwave ovens either.
Food cost varies but can easily be 28 to 33% of your bill. Now add up how much a couple of slices of your Wonder bread, an egg from your $2/dozen eggs and $5 package of bacon is and then try and figure out why the restaurant food costs so much more.
Let's not forget, too, that, in higher end restaurants, the people in the back room aren't high school kids playing on their phones and dancing to hip-hop while making your food. They are most likely professionally trained with an experienced background. None of them are making $10/hour until they find their "real job". This IS their real job.
How can you tell? You can taste the difference. That's all the proof you need. You may think $15 for a bacon and egg sandwich is high until you taste that sandwich. Then you really know what a $15 sandwich tastes like.