Calgary restaurant and food truck owners struggle with tough decisions amid soaring inflation - Action News
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Calgary restaurant and food truck owners struggle with tough decisions amid soaring inflation

Since the start of the war in Ukraine, the cost of living has soared for millions across the globe and Calgary's food service industry is feeling the pinch.

'If we want to move the economy ... we need to also help small businesses,' says restaurant patron

Carolina De La Torre, co-owner of the Arepas Ranch food truck, says the soaring costs of food, gas and propane has caused problems for her business. (Axel Tardieu/Radio-Canada)

Calgary restaurant owners say they are being forced to hike up their menu prices and cut staff hours due to rising food and material costs.

Since the start of the war in Ukraine, the cost of living has soared for millions across the globe and Calgary's food service industry is feeling the pinch.

Carolina De La Torre says since this past winter, inflation hasbeen causing problems for her business. She's the co-owner of Arepas Ranch, a food truck and catering service in Calgary.

De La Torre has run the food truck with her husband, Phanor Viera, and their daughter, Karen, for six years.

Through their business, the family has introduced many Calgarians to the arepa: a traditional dish from Venezuela and Colombia.

Phanor Viera, left, his wife Carolina, centre, and their daughter Karen, right, run the Arepas Ranch food truck in Calgary. The family has introduced many Calgarians to the arepa: a traditional dish from Venezuela and Colombia. (Axel Tardieu/Radio-Canada)

But the prices of some essential arepa ingredients, like corn flour and canola oil, have fallen victim to inflation.

"It's hard for the business, it's really hard," De La Torre said.

The food truck owner says she's trying to cut costs where she can so customers don't see a significant spike in menu prices.

Arepa dough is often made of corn flour, one of many food items that has fallen victim to inflation. (Axel Tardieu/Radio-Canada)

De La Torre said the family business is trying to source more local, seasonal produce from farmers' markets. They're also going directly to wholesalers now for some ingredients.

But even with those savings, De La Torre says the business has had to raise the price ofmost items on their menu by a dollar.

Adding even more financial stresson the food truck's bottom line are the sky high prices for gas and propane.

Remaining optimistic, relying on customers

Rising food costs have forced Arepas Ranch to change some of its recipes. The price of yuca, a root plant,has almost doubled, according to De La Torre, so the food truck has replaced that ingredient with the cheaper option of plantains.

Avocados are also more expensive, so the business is rationing its guacamole more carefully than before.

However, whiletheir profits have fallen over the last six months, the family remains optimistic.

"We passed through the pandemic and that was really hard. So now it's the inflation, and we're going to pass through that as well," De La Torre said.

The family does not have the option to simply stop running their food truck, De La Torre says. For one, summer is high season for food trucks, and the business has several catering contracts they can't abandon.

Daniel Paez, a customer at Arepas Ranch, says inflation won't stop him from visiting the food truck.

"If we want to move the economy and help everyone, each other, we need to also help small businesses," he said.

De La Torre says most people understand why menu prices are rising, and so far, Arepas Ranch hasn't seen a decrease in customers.

Small profit margins getting smaller

In an emailed statement, Restaurants Canada said food prices at retail stores rose by 10.1 per cent between June 2021 and June 2022.

The organization said according to restaurant operators, menu prices are expected to increase by 7.8 per cent by the end of 2022 in comparison to the end of 2021.

That's the highest menu price increase since the introduction of GST in 1991, Restaurants Canada said.

Ernie Tsu, president of the Alberta Hospitality Association, says restaurants don't have another option right now other than to raise prices. Profit margins are already not that highin a regular year, Tsu said, with an average Canadian restaurant taking in about five to seven per cent in profit.

"It was already tough coming out of COVID," Tsu said. "For these local entrepreneurs and owners in the hospitality industry, now they have to move the needle with inflation to try to stay alive and to stay as humanly profitable as possible."

Now, restaurant owners have to get creative to retain customers.

Tsu said a lot of restaurant owners he's spoken to are trying to work with local suppliers more to keep ingredients fresh and seasonal.

He also said some restaurants are switching to healthier dishes or offering more vegetarian options.

Reducing staff hours

Red's Diner, a Calgary restaurant chain, has also increased its prices over the last few months. But according to its general manager, changing menu favourites, or reducing portions and the quality of ingredients, is simply out of the question.

Logan Campbell says the diner's most popular menu item has increased by about $4 in the past five months.

The general manager says the restaurant chain has been using paper menus recently because they've had to reprint about every two months to update prices.

Logan Campbell, general manager of Red's Diner, says the business has had to reprint its menu about every two months to update prices. (Axel Tardieu/Radio-Canada)

"Every day we're watching hour by hour sales, seeing if there's any way we can kind of watch our labour and see if we need this many bodies on," Campbell said.

Campbell said the diner is scheduling staff by 15-minute increments now rather than on the hour or half-hour to save some costs.

A dish from Red's Diner. Campbell says the restaurant chain's most popular menu item has increased by about $4 in the past five months. (Axel Tardieu/Radio-Canada)

"Same goes for the kitchen, watching everything back there and just really reducing our food wastage," he said.

Overall it's a stressful time for Campbell, who says he's never seen inflation this bad in his time working at the diner.

He's counting on regular customers to help the diner get through this rough patch.

"We want our customers to come back here and they still get the same item that they've been used to getting for the last 10 years of our business."

With files from Axel Tardieu