One of the formulas that many restaurants use to is having a varied selection that attracts different types of clients. Among the recipes that we find on their menus, there are some that are capable of stealing the hearts and appetites of many diners, regardless of their age, lifestyle or food preferences.
We are referring to recipes created by our ancestors, cooked in the warmth of the home and loaded with flavor and memories. Is there anything more exciting than grandma’s excellent soup? Accordingly, it is no wonder that many restaurants have that is gradually told when the clients reads the name of the dish on the menu, listens to the waiter's explanation, and ultimately tastes it. The goal is to create instant empathy so that the diner can enjoy the dish more and remember it with greater certainty.
When selling the dish, you call it “Lucy’s happy stew", which is a more attractive name to clients than merely calling it “beef stew with potatoes”.
If you were to read these names on the menu, which one would you order? “Creamy vegetable soup” or “Grandma’s creamy and tender vegetable soup.” Definitely the latter.
Dishes such as “la nonna’s” lasagna, traditional quiches in all its varieties, classic oven-roasted lamb or chicken or ancestral meatballs can become recipes that are very attractive for your menu and are associated with memories of home.
Accordingly, the countless varieties of pastries and cakes can also be a good option. If, for instance, you serve a rich cheese or apple pastry recipe in your restaurant from a team member’s family with an exciting name and a story behind it, you can attract clients that will virtually come to the restaurant for this dessert. It would also need to be delicious, of course!
Like the Pasta Grannies channel, with more than 300,000 subscribers and thousands of views per video, where Italian grandmas cook their recipes with the grace and warmth that characterizes them. It is hypnotic content.
So, if you serve grandma’s delicious recipes at your restaurant, you can also mix technology with tradition via digital marketing by doing the following:
The kitchen is undoubtedly a universal archetype of love that is passed on from generation to generation through food. Why not use this universally shared belief to make your clients happy and increase sales? Fire up your stoves, spice up your stories, and let the customers pour in!
Note: To consistently promote this offering, be sure to publish it on your restaurant’s profile on TheFork, by clicking here, since this will definitely make it easier for more clients to reserve a table at your restaurant. And if you are still not a member of our community, .