Family-run cafe in Bristol considers ‘doubling’ menu prices in bid to stay open

‘Soon we’ll have to start taking things off the menu’
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

A family-run cafe in Bristol is under threat due to the vegetable shortage and soaring pasta prices. Taste of Napoli owner Carmine Monturi, 52, fears the cafe in Broadmead could go out of business.

He says the business is at risk of going under in as little as three months because of the vegetable shortages, blamed on weather in Europe and Africa. And he says the shortages mean prices of their vegetables, pasta and rice have skyrocketed.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Rice price for arancini has doubled and pasta costs are up by 80%, he says. He says he would need to charge double for the same meals to maintain profits - or cull up to a quarter of his menu. He adds that if ingredient prices don’t fall in the next couple of months, the business has “no chance of staying on the market”.

The dad-of-three said: “It’s a real problem. The vegetable prices from wholesalers are 50% higher than last month. But we have no choice because we can’t get them from the supermarkets - the shelves are empty.

“Rice prices for our arancini have doubled and the Italian pasta we use has gone up by 80% too. Soon we’ll have to start taking things off the menu - or we’d have to charge double to make the same profit. But if we did that then we’d have no customers.

“If the prices don’t go down in the next three or four months, we’ll need to close. People don’t realise the struggle independents have - the big companies can survive just fine, but we can’t. Everything we sell is hand-made fresh but some people don’t want to pay more for a slice of pizza here than in a big chain like Greggs.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Carmine has run the cafe for six years. He said prices of imported goods shot up after leaving the EU, and just when they were starting to fall again, Covid-19 struck, setting them back even further.

And they’ve had to reduce their opening hours because so many expats returned to their home countries after Brexit, Italian staff are few and far between. The beginning of the war in Ukraine led to gas and fuel prices skyrocketing, making their overhead costs higher and their transport costs greater.

Carmine Monturi fears his business Taste of Napoli could soon go underCarmine Monturi fears his business Taste of Napoli could soon go under
Carmine Monturi fears his business Taste of Napoli could soon go under

Flour and cooking oil prices also rose in 2022 - so the latest shortages have crippled the family-run business. Vegetable prices have shot up due to the shortage, along with pasta and rice prices. This leaves Carmine with two impossible options - cull their menu or raise their menu prices.

He said to maintain the same profit margins he would have to double the cost of everything on their menu - but then fears he could lose customers. They have already upped most things by 20% but it’s not proving to be enough to compensate for the inflated ingredient costs.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Carmine said: “If people see a price in a shop get higher they think the shop wants more profit. But with us, we don’t have a choice. The best thing would be if the government could help, especially for the independent places. We need help because if this continues for the next three to five months we have no chance of staying on the market.”

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.