P6 — Unit economics pillar
Free tool · P6 unit economics

Recipe scaling calculator India

Enter a base recipe for any number of portions and scale it up or down instantly. All ingredient quantities recalculated automatically. Quick preset scale buttons (0.25× to 10×). Add method and notes. Print or export CSV. No signup.

Recipe Details

Portions

scale
×2
Quick scale:

Ingredients

Ingredient
Original qty
Unit
Scaled qty
Notes

When recipe scaling is critical in an Indian restaurant kitchen

Restaurant kitchens that operate without scaled recipes are cooking from memory — a system that works until the regular chef is absent, until a new hire joins, or until you need to double production for a busy weekend. The most common scaling scenarios:

  • Banquet and event catering. A 200-person banquet requires a recipe scaled by 40–50× from a standard 4-portion test recipe. At that scale, even a small error in the base recipe compounds significantly. A standardised, scaled recipe handed to the kitchen team replaces verbal instruction and reduces the chance of a dish being over-salted or under-spiced at service.
  • Festival seasons and high-volume periods. During Diwali, Christmas, Eid, and other peak periods, most restaurants run 150–200% of normal covers. Scaling core dishes in advance, printing the scaled recipes, and briefing the kitchen team reduces prep errors under pressure.
  • Central kitchen production. A central kitchen that produces bulk portions for multiple outlets needs scaled recipes as the production document. The scaled recipe is the authoritative source for the batch — it determines the purchase order quantities and the production sheet allocation.
  • New hire onboarding. A scaled recipe serves as the training document for a new chef joining the kitchen. A recipe that says “add salt to taste” is not a training document — it is an invitation for inconsistency. A recipe with precise quantities, methods, and notes is something a new hire can follow without supervision on day one.
  • Recipe costing and yield analysis. Scaling a recipe to a specific batch size and then dividing total ingredient cost by portions gives you the cost per portion — the foundation of menu pricing. The recipe scaling calculator and the recipe cost card tool work together for this purpose.

Ingredients that do not scale linearly — the common pitfalls

  • Salt and seasoning. The most common pitfall in large-batch cooking. At 10× scale, you rarely need 10× the salt — start at 6–7× and adjust at the end of cooking. The same applies to MSG, soy sauce, fish sauce, and any other high-sodium seasoning.
  • Whole spices (cardamom, cloves, bay leaves). Scaling whole spices linearly produces an overpowering flavour in large batches because they continue to release intensity during extended cooking. Use 60–70% of the scaled quantity as your starting point.
  • Leavening agents (baking powder, baking soda, yeast). Critical in bakery and tandoor operations. Leavening does not scale linearly — at high quantities, chemical leaveners can produce a metallic or soapy off-note. Refer to established bakery scaling guidelines rather than linear multiplication.
  • Cooking liquid (water, stock, cream). Reduction recipes behave differently at larger volumes — a 500ml liquid base reduces to 200ml in 15 minutes, but a 5-litre base may take 45–60 minutes to reach the equivalent concentration. Do not scale cook time linearly for reduction-based sauces and gravies.
  • Cooking time. Roasting, baking, and braising times do not scale linearly with batch size. A single whole chicken roasts in 60 minutes; two chickens in the same oven still take 60 minutes (slightly longer for the cold load). Doubling a braising recipe may require only 10–15% more time. Always validate cook time with a probe thermometer rather than relying on the scaled time calculation.

Where this fits

  • Recipe cost card — use the scaled quantities from this calculator to cost the batch accurately
  • Production sheet — the scaled recipe feeds into the daily production plan for the kitchen team
  • Material requisition — scaled ingredient quantities drive the requisition from the dry store to the kitchen
  • Purchase order — scale a recipe for the week, sum ingredient quantities, and that is your purchase order basis
  • Food cost calculator — calculate batch food cost % once the scaled recipe cost is known
  • P6 — Unit economics pillar — complete guide to recipe costing, food cost control, and P&L analysis for Indian restaurants