, etc. Must be plain HTML paragraphs and headings (e.g.,
…
). That suggests using WordPress block comment syntax? They gave example:…
. So we should output HTML with those comment wrappers for each paragraph? Probably yes: each paragraph should be wrapped in that comment block. Headings maybe also have comment blocks? They said “write as plain HTML paragraphs and headings (e.g.,…
)”. So headings maybe just etc without comment? But to be safe, we can wrap headings similarly? Usually WordPress uses …
. But they gave example only for paragraph. I’ll follow: For paragraphs use that syntax. For headings, maybe just plain etc. But to be consistent, we could also use comment blocks for headings. However they said “write as plain HTML paragraphs and headings (e.g.,
…
)”. That example is for paragraph; they didn’t give for heading, but we can just use normal heading tags. I’ll useetc without comment. We need total words 450-500. Let’s aim for ~475 words. We need to count words. Let’s draft. First line: Title: The AI Menu Engineer: How Algorithms Generate Custom, Creative Combinations Then newline newline then start HTML. We’ll need to include sections with headings. Let’s draft content and then count. I’ll write in a text editor mentally. Title line: Now content:
AI is reshaping how local caterers design menus, turning hours of brainstorming into minutes of automated proposal generation.
By pairing a simple prompt blueprint with live inventory data, you can create custom, allergen‑aware menus that scale recipes instantly.
Now heading:Actionable Starting Point: The Prompt Blueprint
Then paragraph.The core of any AI menu engineer is a structured prompt that tells the model exactly what you need.
Include these fields: Budget Tier ({Low/Mid/High}), Dietary Constraints ({Constraints}), Event Type ({EventType}), Guest Count ({Number}), Season ({Season}), and Special Notes ({Notes}).
Add the instruction: “Prioritize recipes marked ‘In‑Stock.’” to tie the prompt to your inventory dashboard.
Now heading:Ingredient Availability & Quality Control
Paragraphs.Connect your AI tool to a simple inventory sheet (Google Sheets or Airtable) that flags each ingredient as In‑Stock, Low, or Out.
The model can only suggest combinations; it cannot taste, so always review the output for flavor balance and allergen safety before sending to a client.
Now heading:Free Online AI Menu Generators (e.g., Template.net)
Paragraph.Start with a free template‑based generator: enter your prompt blueprint into the tool’s input box, select a cuisine style, and let the AI spit out a draft menu.
Export the result, cross‑check ingredient availability, and adjust any flagged items manually.
Now heading:Building Your Own “Local AI” Workflow
Paragraph.For greater control, create a lightweight workflow that chains three components: a prompt engine, an inventory lookup, and a recipe‑scaling script.
Now heading:How it actually works: A simple framework
We need to list phases. Maybe use- with
- each as paragraph? But we need to keep HTML paragraphs and headings; lists are okay but might be considered not paragraph. Safer to use paragraphs with phase headings.
We’ll do:
Phase 1: Prepare Your Data – Clean your recipe vault, tag each dish with allergens, cost, seasonality, and an In‑Stock flag.
Phase 2: Choose and Test Your Tool – Pick a free AI text generator (e.g., OpenAI’s playground, HuggingFace API) or a no‑code platform like Make.com; run a few test prompts to verify output format.
Phase 3: Build Your First Automated Proposal – Feed the filled prompt blueprint into the tool, retrieve the menu, then run a script that scales ingredient quantities to the guest count and checks against inventory.
Phase 4: Integrate and Refine – Save the proposal to your CRM, request client feedback on creativity and fit, use that feedback to tighten Recipe Vault tags and pairing rules, and track time saved versus the manual process.
Now heading:Your AI Menu Engineer Prompt Blueprint
We need to present the bullet list. Use- with
- paragraphs? Might be okay. But to stay within spec, we can embed each bullet as a paragraph with a dash.
Let’s do:
– Budget Tier: {Low/Mid/High}
… and so on. Also include the two action items: Ask for client feedback… and Track time saved… We’ll do them as bullet points too. Now final promotional paragraph. We must ensure total words 450-500. Let’s write the full content and then count words. I’ll write everything in a single block and then count. Draft: Title: The AI Menu Engineer: How Algorithms Generate Custom, Creative CombinationsAI is reshaping how local caterers design menus, turning hours of brainstorming into minutes of automated proposal generation.
By pairing a simple prompt blueprint with live inventory data, you can create custom, allergen‑aware menus that scale recipes instantly.
Actionable Starting Point: The Prompt Blueprint
The core of any AI menu engineer is a structured prompt that tells the model exactly what you need.
Include these fields: Budget Tier ({Low/Mid/High}), Dietary Constraints ({Constraints}), Event Type ({EventType}), Guest Count ({Number}), Season ({Season}), and Special Notes ({Notes}).
Add the instruction: “Prioritize recipes marked ‘In‑Stock.’” to tie the prompt to your inventory dashboard.
Ingredient Availability & Quality Control
Connect your AI tool to a simple inventory sheet (Google Sheets or Airtable) that flags each ingredient as In‑Stock, Low, or Out.
The model can only suggest combinations; it cannot taste, so always review the output for flavor balance and allergen safety before sending to a client.
Free Online AI Menu Generators (e.g., Template.net)
Start with a free template‑based generator: enter your prompt blueprint into the tool’s input box, select a cuisine style, and let the AI spit out a draft menu.
Export the result, cross‑check ingredient availability, and adjust any flagged items manually.
Building Your Own “Local AI” Workflow
For greater control, create a lightweight workflow that chains three components: a prompt engine, an inventory lookup, and a recipe‑scaling script.
How it actually works: A simple framework
Phase 1: Prepare Your Data – Clean your recipe vault, tag each dish with allergens, cost, seasonality, and an In‑Stock flag.
Phase 2: Choose and Test Your Tool – Pick a free AI text generator (e.g., OpenAI’s playground, HuggingFace API) or a no‑code platform like Make.com; run a few test prompts to verify output format.
Phase 3: Build Your First Automated Proposal – Feed the filled prompt blueprint into the tool, retrieve the menu, then run a script that scales ingredient quantities to the guest count and checks against inventory.
Phase 4: Integrate and Refine – Save the proposal to your CRM, request client feedback on creativity and fit, use that feedback to tighten Recipe Vault tags and pairing rules, and track time saved versus the manual process.
Your AI Menu Engineer Prompt Blueprint
– Budget Tier: {Low/Mid/High}
– Dietary Constraints: {Constraints}
– Event Type: {EventType}
– Guest Count: {Number}
– Season: {Season}
– Special Notes: {Notes}
– [ ] Ask for client feedback on the “creativity” and “fit” of the proposed menus. Use this to refine your Recipe Vault tags and pairing rules.
– [ ] Track time saved. Compare how long it took to create proposals before and after.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Local Catering Companies: How to Automate Custom Menu Proposals and Allergen/Recipe Scaling.
Now we need to count words. Let’s count manually. I’ll copy the text and count. Title line: “Title: The AI Menu Engineer: How Algorithms Generate Custom, Creative Combinations” Words: Title: (1) The(2) AI(3) Menu(4) Engineer:(5) How(6) Algorithms(7) Generate(8) Custom,(9) Creative(10)
- paragraphs? Might be okay. But to stay within spec, we can embed each bullet as a paragraph with a dash.
Let’s do: