Vendor changes are rarely neutral
Vendor substitutions happen for many reasons: availability issues, pricing changes, distributor consolidation, or convenience. Even when pricing looks similar, products are rarely identical.
Differences in trim, moisture content, pack size, and shelf life all affect usable yield. When those differences are not accounted for, food cost and execution begin to drift.
Yield loss hides inside substitutions
A protein that costs the same per pound may not produce the same number of portions. Slight differences in fat content or trim loss can reduce usable yield.
Over time, this creates:
Smaller portions or portion drift
Inconsistent plate appearance
Higher effective food cost
Increased waste during prep
Because invoices look familiar, these losses often go unnoticed.
Prep time and execution are affected
Vendor changes also affect how food behaves during prep and cooking. Different products may:
Cook faster or slower
Hold differently during service
Require different seasoning or handling
Break down faster in hot or cold holding
These changes increase variability, especially during busy shifts, and can impact ticket times and guest experience.
Consistency suffers before cost is questioned
Guests often notice consistency issues before operators notice cost changes. Texture, flavor, and portion size inconsistencies erode trust even when prices stay the same.
Front-of-house teams feel this pressure first through complaints, returns, or awkward explanations. By the time food cost is reviewed, the issue has usually been present for weeks.
How to manage vendor changes intentionally
Restaurants that handle vendor changes well tend to:
Review yield and portion assumptions after substitutions
Adjust prep levels and recipes when needed
Communicate changes clearly to the kitchen
Monitor guest feedback closely during transitions
Vendor changes are not inherently bad. They simply require attention to detail to avoid long-term impact.


