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Restaurants, Wine, and Hospitalians w/ Richard Hanauer, Lettuce Entertain You

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Manage episode 375838340 series 3248251
Conteúdo fornecido por Robert Vernick and Peter Yeung. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por Robert Vernick and Peter Yeung ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

As the wine director and partner of the Lettuce Entertain You restaurant group, Richard Hanauer oversees ~100 restaurants' wine programs. Seeing beverage sales grow from single digits to ~20% of sales, Richard discusses the role beverage plays in restaurants, sommeliers, the elements of good wine programs, and his newest wine country themed concept, Oakville Grill & Cellar.


Detailed Show Notes:

Lettuce Entertain You ("LEY")

  • ~100 restaurants in Chicago/IL, CA, NV, FL, TX, VA, DC
  • Partitions of different culinary groups

Beverage impact on sales - can be 0% - 50% of sales

  • Fine dining and wine sales used to have a positive correlation
  • More casual concepts w/high-end beverage programs (e.g., luxury whiskey w/ casual BBQ)
  • LEY - Wine was single digit of sales, now high teens-20% over the last 20 years
  • The volume of sales driven through by the glass ("BTG") programs (e.g., RPM Seafood sells 4-5x Pinot Grigio vs. Sancerre, which is 2x the price)
  • Wine program drives return visits vs. initial visits - people come back for the person who recommended the bottle

Definition of a good wine program

  • Used to be verticals of great traditional producers
  • Now, more about how the wine program fits into the restaurant (e.g., Piedmont wines w/ Piedmont food)
  • Need good stemware; not great stemware
  • Wines at the right temperature and match the menu

Role of the Sommelier

  • Operations - wine binning/storage, ordering, tasting, building wine menus
  • When not involved in wine, they should be "hospitalians," helping with everything else
  • Best somms build relationships with wineries (get access to unique wines) and guests (getting them into the right bottle, not the most expensive -> brings customers back)
  • Average fine dining ratios - 24 tables, 1 somm per 12 tables

Somm turnover

  • Pre-Covid - average tenure 18 months
  • Re-training takes 6-12 months
  • LEY - tries to retain employees, treats them well w/ 401k, benefits, opportunities to grow career w/in LEY

Restaurant pricing

  • Rent is the most significant expense -> increases COGS for everything, including wine
  • Food/cocktail ingredients are blended together, but wine is not, making pricing a more significant issue
  • Goal - keep COGS down while holding price (sometimes achieved through relationship w/ wineries)
  • Try to get less available wines - have less price transparency
  • Markups lower on higher-end wines - standard markups would make the wines unsellable

Oakville Grill & Cellar - opened April 2023

  • CA wine area themed restaurant
  • Napa inspiration - "Never pretentious, never formal…very comfortable, pleasurable, elevated service & quality of food, rarely decor"
  • The entire wine program is from CA

Cellar Door - tasting studio w/in Oakville Grill

  • 6 person suite
  • Partners w/ different winery every month
  • Re-creates the winery tasting list down to vintage and wine pricing
  • Gets training from the winery
  • Guests can sign up for winery, take home wine
  • ~500 guests/month capacity (4 seatings/night, 5 days/week)
  • Winery requirements: right pricing (not low or high), interesting tasting list, pedigree, make sense w/Chicago's seasonality, open to all of CA
  • Also, BTG in Oakville Grill and usually on the wine list before and after

Trends for Restaurants

  • Authenticity - e.g., Aglianico w/ Neapolitan pizza
  • Wine getting more expensive -> The cost of building a cellar is higher, which leads to more focused wine lists
Get access to library episodes

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

179 episódios

Artwork
iconCompartilhar
 
Manage episode 375838340 series 3248251
Conteúdo fornecido por Robert Vernick and Peter Yeung. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por Robert Vernick and Peter Yeung ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

As the wine director and partner of the Lettuce Entertain You restaurant group, Richard Hanauer oversees ~100 restaurants' wine programs. Seeing beverage sales grow from single digits to ~20% of sales, Richard discusses the role beverage plays in restaurants, sommeliers, the elements of good wine programs, and his newest wine country themed concept, Oakville Grill & Cellar.


Detailed Show Notes:

Lettuce Entertain You ("LEY")

  • ~100 restaurants in Chicago/IL, CA, NV, FL, TX, VA, DC
  • Partitions of different culinary groups

Beverage impact on sales - can be 0% - 50% of sales

  • Fine dining and wine sales used to have a positive correlation
  • More casual concepts w/high-end beverage programs (e.g., luxury whiskey w/ casual BBQ)
  • LEY - Wine was single digit of sales, now high teens-20% over the last 20 years
  • The volume of sales driven through by the glass ("BTG") programs (e.g., RPM Seafood sells 4-5x Pinot Grigio vs. Sancerre, which is 2x the price)
  • Wine program drives return visits vs. initial visits - people come back for the person who recommended the bottle

Definition of a good wine program

  • Used to be verticals of great traditional producers
  • Now, more about how the wine program fits into the restaurant (e.g., Piedmont wines w/ Piedmont food)
  • Need good stemware; not great stemware
  • Wines at the right temperature and match the menu

Role of the Sommelier

  • Operations - wine binning/storage, ordering, tasting, building wine menus
  • When not involved in wine, they should be "hospitalians," helping with everything else
  • Best somms build relationships with wineries (get access to unique wines) and guests (getting them into the right bottle, not the most expensive -> brings customers back)
  • Average fine dining ratios - 24 tables, 1 somm per 12 tables

Somm turnover

  • Pre-Covid - average tenure 18 months
  • Re-training takes 6-12 months
  • LEY - tries to retain employees, treats them well w/ 401k, benefits, opportunities to grow career w/in LEY

Restaurant pricing

  • Rent is the most significant expense -> increases COGS for everything, including wine
  • Food/cocktail ingredients are blended together, but wine is not, making pricing a more significant issue
  • Goal - keep COGS down while holding price (sometimes achieved through relationship w/ wineries)
  • Try to get less available wines - have less price transparency
  • Markups lower on higher-end wines - standard markups would make the wines unsellable

Oakville Grill & Cellar - opened April 2023

  • CA wine area themed restaurant
  • Napa inspiration - "Never pretentious, never formal…very comfortable, pleasurable, elevated service & quality of food, rarely decor"
  • The entire wine program is from CA

Cellar Door - tasting studio w/in Oakville Grill

  • 6 person suite
  • Partners w/ different winery every month
  • Re-creates the winery tasting list down to vintage and wine pricing
  • Gets training from the winery
  • Guests can sign up for winery, take home wine
  • ~500 guests/month capacity (4 seatings/night, 5 days/week)
  • Winery requirements: right pricing (not low or high), interesting tasting list, pedigree, make sense w/Chicago's seasonality, open to all of CA
  • Also, BTG in Oakville Grill and usually on the wine list before and after

Trends for Restaurants

  • Authenticity - e.g., Aglianico w/ Neapolitan pizza
  • Wine getting more expensive -> The cost of building a cellar is higher, which leads to more focused wine lists
Get access to library episodes

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

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