TLDR: Our free dish storytelling prompts for chefs help you describe food in ways that sell—ideal for menus, briefings, and social media. Read the blog and start today.
Introduction
Describing food is a skill. A well-worded menu line or caption can spark cravings, bookings, or reposts. But too often, chefs undersell their plates. This free guide helps you turn basic descriptions into short, emotional stories that speak to culture, process, and flavour.
Table of Contents
1. Why Storytelling Sells More Food
People don’t buy food—they buy the experience behind it.
- Emotion: builds appetite
- Backstory: creates value
- Descriptive language: sets expectations
Chefs who can talk about food well often book more events, upsell better, and build stronger online brands.
2. 4 Key Angles to Describe a Dish
Use one—or combine them—for extra impact:
- Emotion: What should they feel? Comfort? Surprise? Nostalgia?
Example: “A bowl that tastes like Sunday afternoons at home.” - Ingredients: What’s special, seasonal, or local?
Example: “Charred leeks and cold goat’s cheese”
Highlight sourcing: “Hand-dived scallops from Oban” - Technique: What shows craft?
Example: “48-hour brined pork belly, finished over coals” - Culture/Memory: Where did the idea come from?
Example: “A twist on the Filipino kare-kare I grew up eating”
Example: “Inspired by summer nights in Marseille”
3. Real-World Examples
Before: “Lamb with mash and peas”
After: “Seared salt-marsh lamb, mint pea purée, smoked mash—spring on a plate”
Before: “Chocolate tart”
After: “Silky dark chocolate with black garlic caramel and crisp barley shortbread”
These aren’t exaggerations—they’re sensory guides.
4. Free Prompts to Try Today
- “This dish reminds me of ____ because ____”
- “The texture is like ____ but the flavour hits like ____”
- “We chose this ingredient because ____”
- “Think of this as our take on ____ from ____”
- “It tastes like ____ with the smell of ____ in the background”
Use these on menus, specials boards, team briefings, or content posts.
5. How to Use This in Your Kitchen
- Update your specials board with more descriptive copy
- Train staff to say more than “it’s nice”
- Add mini-stories to Instagram captions
- Turn basic menus into brand-building assets
Every word is a chance to connect. Make them count.
6. What to Read Next
Coming soon:
- How to Write a Better Menu in Under an Hour
- Content Ideas for Chefs Who Hate Social Media
- How to Turn a Dish into a Marketing Asset
Conclusion
These free dish storytelling prompts for chefs are your shortcut to selling more food with fewer words. You’ve already done the hard part—creating something worth eating. Now, let’s make people hungry for it.
Click to read the blog and start telling better food stories today. Use the prompts. Watch what happens.