Las Vegas Review-Journal

Meat prices tough to swallow

Local eateries scramble to adjust

- By Al Mancini Las Vegas Review-journal

Four dollars to add pepperoni to your pizza? A 50 percent increase in the price of your favorite barbecue? These are the types of scenarios local restaurate­urs are scrambling to avoid, even as they face the host of other challenges associated with reopening their dining rooms.

A combinatio­n of increased demand, as more restaurant­s resume operations, and disruption in traditiona­l supply chains because of COVID-19 have resulted in skyrocketi­ng meat prices at restaurant suppliers. And things are getting worse.

“We were getting brisket at $2.89 (per pound),” Rollin’

Smoke BBQ’S John Holland said. “It’s now at $3.79. And they’re saying next week it’s going to be $4.20, and after that it’s going to be six dollars plus.”

In an effort to assure he won’t have to raise brisket prices soon, Holland has locked in 180 cases for his three locations at $3.79. But he is worried about what will happen when that runs out.

“Right now, people aren’t working and they depend on a good quality meal at a good price,” he says. “Once I run out of this brisket, I don’t know what we’re going to do.”

Difficult decisions

For a worst-case scenario, one doesn’t have to look far. In Boulder City, Fox Smokehouse BBQ had been preparing to close its current location to the public upon opening a new space this summer. After seeing the price of brisket rise 239 percent, the owners announced Wednesday that May 17 would be the last day of operation at the current spot.

“We just can’t ask our customers to pay those kind of prices, and we can’t afford to absorb it,” owner Kelly Fox said. “So now we really don’t have a choice but to move over to the new location and hope for the best in six weeks.”

At Big B’s Texas BBQ, owner Brian Buechner spends most of his mornings trying to track down reasonably priced brisket, as well as baby back, beef and pork ribs, so he won’t have to make a similar decision.

“Every day I get up around 5:30, and my first stop is (wholesaler) Restaurant Depot,” he said. “My second call is to the suppliers to see if any meat came in that I can (purchase). And then I spend the morning driving around picking up meats for both stores.”

Barbecue restaurant­s are far from

Right now, people aren’t working and they depend on a good quality meal at a good price. Once I run out of this Brisket, I don’t know what we’re going to do. the only ones affected. At Good Pie pizzeria in Pawn Plaza, owner Vincent Rotolo is facing his own price problems.

“The only two proteins I have on the menu (right now) are meatballs and pepperoni, and both of them are going up by 30 percent,” he says.

As more restaurant­s prepare to reopen dining rooms, meat shortages and rising prices are forcing them to think on their feet. The Stove, a breakfast and lunch spot in Henderson, will offer a limited menu when it reopens on Friday.

As Brian Howard prepares to reopen his award-winning Sparrow + Wolf in early June, he’s confrontin­g prices that have nearly doubled for some cuts of meat.

“In terms of menu developmen­t, it’s just about being nimble,” Howard says. “I think our menu will change fairly often, based on what we’re able to receive.”

The situation is expected to start improving in about a month. Paul Savage, vice president of protein and strategic developmen­t for the restaurant supplier The Chef ’s Warehouse, expects things to start easing next month, as meatpackin­g plants affected by COVID-19 get back up to speed.

“Mid-june things will start returning slowly back to normal,” he predicts. “But until then we’ve got about another month to get through.”

Contact Al Mancini at amancini@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Almanciniv­egas on Twitter.

 ??  ?? “The only two proteins I have on the menu are meatballs and pepperoni” and both “are going up by 30 percent,” Rotolo says.
“The only two proteins I have on the menu are meatballs and pepperoni” and both “are going up by 30 percent,” Rotolo says.

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