The uncomfortable truth: you can be busy and still bleeding money
When food cost climbs, most owners assume “supplier prices” are the culprit.
Sometimes, yes. But weekly waste is usually the quiet multiplier:
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Over-prep
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Over-portioning
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Poor rotation
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Bad forecasting
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Plate waste patterns no one tracks
ReFED reports that restaurants and foodservice generate millions of tons of surplus food, with a significant portion coming from plate waste.
This audit is built for real restaurants (not perfect ones)
You do not need a consultant. You need a repeatable habit.
Time required: 30 minutes, once per week
Goal: Find the top 3 waste drivers and fix one per week
Step 1: Pick your “Waste Week” day and keep it consistent
Choose a slower day if possible. The point is consistency.
Have two people involved:
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Kitchen lead or manager
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One person who sees inventory ordering
Step 2: Track waste in 3 buckets only
Keep it simple. You are looking for patterns, not perfection.
Bucket A: Prep waste (before it hits the line)
Examples:
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Slimy produce
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Expired dairy
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Trim loss that is higher than expected
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Prep batches that never sold
Bucket B: Line waste (during service)
Examples:
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Wrong fires
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Remakes
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Held too long
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Batch items tossed at close
Bucket C: Plate waste (guests do not eat it)
Examples:
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Same side item coming back untouched
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Portion sizes that do not match demand
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Menu items that sound good but do not land
ReFED notes that a large portion of surplus in full-service restaurants is tied to plate waste, which means this is not just a “kitchen problem.” It’s a menu and portioning problem too.
Step 3: Do the “Top 10” waste list, not a full inventory count
You are not counting every item. You are identifying the biggest offenders.
Write down the top 10 items you threw away this week and estimate:
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item
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reason (prep, line, plate)
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rough dollar impact (even if it’s a guess)
Then circle the top 3.
Step 4: Fix waste with a one-week experiment (not a forever rule)
Pick one of the top 3 and run a tiny test for seven days.
Here are high-impact tests that do not mess up your whole operation:
If it’s prep waste:
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Reduce par by 10–15% for that item
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Prep smaller batches twice instead of one huge batch
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Tighten rotation rules (label date + “use by”)
If it’s line waste:
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Tighten your “hold time” standards
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Change how you stage the item (hot hold vs made-to-order)
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Add a quick expo callout for high-remake items
If it’s plate waste:
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Adjust portion size slightly
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Offer a choice of sides where one option wastes less
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Rework plating so it looks generous without being excessive
Step 5: Tie the waste audit to ordering and specials
This is where waste turns into profit.
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If you have extra product, feature it as a limited special.
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If an item repeatedly wastes, reduce ordering or change the prep method.
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If plate waste is high, consider a portion shift or menu description update.
ReFED’s broader data shows food waste is a large system-wide issue. Your weekly audit is how you make it a controllable, store-level issue.
Where POS fits (lightly, and only where helpful)
Your POS can support this without becoming the headline:
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Use sales mix to forecast prep levels more accurately
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Identify low-selling items that create over-prep
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Spot modifiers or side swaps that correlate with plate waste
If you want to see how restaurant reporting inside Lifelong can help you line up ordering with actual demand, book a demo.
Quick weekly checklist (copy/paste)
☐ Log top 10 wasted items
☐ Categorize prep vs line vs plate
☐ Circle top 3 offenders
☐ Choose one 7-day test fix
☐ Review results next week and repeat


