Write Dish Descriptions That Ignite The Imagination
A well-crafted menu description does more than list ingredients—it invites the diner into a story
Think of each item not as a dish but as a doorway into an experience
The goal isn’t to overwhelm with details but to spark a quiet sense of wonder
Imagine your salmon as wild-harvested fillet, kissed by smoky cedar, crowned with a delicate citrus glaze that lingers like a sigh
That subtle reframe transforms a simple choice into an unforgettable moment
The most compelling descriptions leave room for the mind to wander
Avoid listing every herb and spice
Imbue each phrase with quiet complexity
Say the roasted vegetables are caramelized slowly under a blanket of herbs—not rosemary, thyme, and oregano
Trust your guest’s imagination to complete the picture
The brain remembers what it creates, not what it consumes
Choose words that evoke texture and aroma, not just ornament
Words like velvety, smoky, crisp, fragrant, teletorni restoran or toasted can evoke texture and aroma without overdoing it
Steer clear of tired marketing jargon that rings hollow
Speak in the tone your chefs actually use
Is your chef aging their own pickles for weeks? Reveal that quietly
The most powerful menus whisper, not shout
Tell someone the chocolate cake is served with house-made sea salt caramel—but don’t explain how the salt cuts through the sweetness
It’s not the description—it’s the discovery that lingers
Pacing is power
Break it down. Let silence speak
Each line lingers just long enough to make the reader pause
Let each phrase hang like incense in the air
A fine dining space might lean into elegance
Don’t overpromise
Let the food speak after the words have whispered
It makes them want to find out for themselves