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I'll take Jeff Kearney's example as an example:
If we can agree that soy costs two cents more per ounce than milk and that in a 12z drink, we'll use ten ounces of soy, then the raw cost to the shop in question is $ .20 (twenty cents).
If we then take the standard foodservice metric of 30% (where the cost of your ingredients is 30% of the retail price), then we would need to multiply that twenty cents by about 3.5 times. This gives us an appropriate price of seventy cents.
Considering that many shops are only charging fifty cents for soy - including the much larger 16 and 20 ounce drinks, you soy drinkers are getting an absolute bargain. Even at fifty cents, the average shop is eating the cost of your soy and losing money in the process.
That's quite a string of assumptions you've made, there. I am in no way a hater. Dairy, believe it or not, IS the ingredient for the drinks we are borrowing from another culture. Replacing it, in fact, IS a modification of the traditional recipe.Haeger, you're a hater. Using your post as a foundation, let's just clear the air a little for all soy-bashers:
As an expert on the healthiness of soy, perhaps you also realize that for no human on earth is cow's milk a "requirement," and that espresso itself is "a modification that has become commonplace."
How can you be so staunch and nit-picky about these luxury items? Time to evolve, my friend. Demand is what it is, the winds of change are a-blowin', and if you don't know how to steam soy by now -- well, I'd say don't quit your day job, but in this case it's probably "time to redouble your efforts in your night job."
Profits over people is the American way; we see it every day, it's the cost of all our "freedoms," we can accept that. A cafe humbly recouping costs where it must is also understandable -- available effects costs. Gettin' all aggro because an exponentially growing number of customers "break" your "normal flow of things" sounds more like a problem with your inflexible ideas of "normal." 60 years ago, I suppose you'd refuse to serve a man without a hat. 30 years ago you would scarcely have known what a latte is, cow or otherwise. And now -- sweet fancy moses! These wackos expect us to steam the milk of a bean??? Head for the hills!
Charge what you want while you can; with a 'tude like that, clearly you're not in the business of pleasing customers. Someday government subsidies will be more evenly distributed and cost differentials will reflect sustainability over the power of lobbies, and then maybe all customers will be welcome in your cafe. In the meantime, I suggest you take a look at what the FDA's not telling you about pus.
Qusetion for all of you... What percentage of lattes/ specialtly beverages are going out of you're shops? As compared to moo juice.
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