Every Dish In The Menu & What They Really Mean

Every Dish In The Menu & What They Really Mean

Every course served at the Hawthorn by Chef Slowik is deliberate, and every single one of The Menu movie dishes has a specific meaning behind it. The Menu is centered around a unique dinner experience on the island called Hawthorn, where twelve guests dine at an exclusive restaurant owned by celebrity chef Julian Slowik. The twelve guests consist of wealthy business people, celebrities, food critics, and others who can offer such an expensive restaurant experience — a stark contrast with the kitchen staff who live and work on the island with the Chef to earn their living and provide the service the wealthy minority has paid for.

As the name suggests, The Menu is structured around an actual menu cooked and planned by Julian himself. Every dish tells a story, with an overarching team which will eventually lead to the reveal of Chef Slowik’s plan to kill everyone at the end of The Menu. Most of the courses are introduced by Julian Slowik (Ralph Fiennes) himself as the dishes are served and cooked in front of the guests, explaining the ingredients used and the significance behind them. With every dish, there is a commentary on the meaning of food, the food industry itself, and the wealthy clientele who frequent exclusive dining experiences.

Every Dish In The Menu & What They Really Mean

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Lemon Caviar Serve On Raw Oyster With Mignonette

The Only Dish In The Menu That Isn’t Explained

Tyler with Margot Taking a Photo of His Dish in The Menu

The first of The Menu movie dishes is not served on the island, but is given to the guests on the way to Hawthorn after they board the boat. As the only dish without an explanation, viewers cannot be sure what the intended meaning behind this course is meant to be. However, The Menu may have hinted at Chef’s plan and history in the sourness of the lemon. In fact, Tyler is enthusiastic and shares an unnecessary and possibly wrong explanation of the dish. Audiences who are familiar with the dish and caught Tyler’s pretentious explanation already had a clue about how his interactions with the Chef might go.

Amuse Bouche

The Early Hint That Chef Slowik Is In Control

Food Being Carefully Prepared in The Menu

Amuse Bouche is the first dish served to The Menu cast on the island. After the dinner, guests are taken on a tour of the island and shown how all the ingredients for The Menu movie dishes are harvested and presented there. Interestingly, Amuse Bouche is a dish that traditionally is not ordered by patrons but, instead, served depending solely on the chef’s selection. Therefore, with this dish, The Menu is foreshadowing how the entire evening has been meticulously crafted by Julian, and at this point, the guests have no control.

First Course: The Island

A Metaphor About The Fleeting Nature Of Human Life

Ralph Fiennes as Chef Slowik looking at his other chefs in The Menu

The various locations where The Menu was filmed were crucial to establishing the island, the setting of this artistic massacre. The first course is also the first dish introduced by Chef Slowik, as he would do for all succeeding The Menu movie dishes. From the seaweed to the fresh raw scallop, every ingredient of the dish comes from the island itself, as the name suggests. The Chef is clearly inspired by nature, particularly the ocean, and the entire ecosystem around them. This highlights the relevance of the raw ingredients compared to the fleeting presence of human life on the island, once again foreshadowing how The Menu will end.

Second Course: Breadless Bread Plate

A Veiled Commentary On The Guests At The Hawthorn

A plate for a breadless bread course, so it's just the accompaniments

The second course is made up of no bread with only savory accomplishments, defined as genius by some guests but offensive to others. As Lillian Bloom suggests in her comment, the concept of the dish is rooted in class history, which is often highlighted through the privileged diners in The Menu. The first truly unusual offering among The Menu movie dishes, this plate of sauces suggests that none of the island’s guests deserve bread. After all, they are not ordinary patrons, and as explained by Chef, bread and grain have always been the food of the impoverished throughout history. This was the first overt clue about Chef’s uncommon plans.

The Menu Chef Slowik and Margot

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Third Course: Chicken Tacos With Scissors In It

The Threatening Dish With A Chilling Past

Every Dish In The Menu & What They Really Mean

Julian calls this course “Memory.” In his speech, Chef recalls when he used to eat tacos with his family on Tuesdays. One night, when his father came home drunk and hurt his mother, Julian stopped him by stabbing him with scissors in the thigh. This explains why the dish is served with a small pair of scissors in the chicken. Julian also mentions that this is a dish he has made since the beginning of his career as a chef. However, as with every one of The Menu movie dishes, these tasty tacos come with a dark twist.

As the ending of The Menu approaches, things start to get weirder. The guests soon find out that the tacos contain personal and sometimes compromising pictures or documents of each guest. As such, the tacos expose the guests’ secrets, like Richard cheating on his wife. Hilariously, Tyler’s photos were of him taking pictures during the dinner. Not only that, but the personalized tacos also subtly reveal why Julian had chosen these specific guests. The food critic Lillian, for example, has caused many restaurants to close, with their picture shown on her tacos. They all represent why Julian has lost his love for his craft.

Fourth Course: The Mess

A Comment On The Futility Of Pursuing Perfection

Julian (Ralph Fiennes) standing with a man in an apron in The Menu

Jeremy is Julian’s sous chef, who serves a key purpose in one of The Menu movie dishes. The fourth course starts with Jeremy shooting himself: he will never be good enough to be at Chef’s level, as explained by Julian in his speech. After his body is taken away, the guests are served pressure-cooked vegetables, roasted fillet, potato confit, beef just, and bone marrow. During this course, The Menu quickly takes a darker, horror turn, which is soon followed by Richard’s finger being cut off. The meaning of “The Mess” is simple and clear: the pursuit of culinary perfection to please strangers put chefs under tremendous, sometimes lethal pressure.

Palate Cleanser: Wild Bergamot and Red Clover Tea

The Evening’s Final Moments Of Normalcy

the menu movie_tea

Tea is not only a good palate cleanser, but is also a calming drink. It may be the most normal of The Menu’s movie dishes, but this is only to ensure that the guests remain calm for the next part, even after witnessing Julian shoot himself. During this dish, Julian offers his guests his chance to ask him questions, as the tea represents the last moment of the calm before the storm. And in this case, he explains that the guests represent ingredients to a bigger concept, foreshadowing the end of The Menu and Chef’s intention of killing everybody. He explains why he despises every single one of them.

Man’s Folly: Dungeness Crab, Umeboshi, Yogurt Whey, Kelp

A Culinary Exploration Of Male Insecurity

Che Katherine and the Chef in menu

For the sixth of The Menu‘s movie dishes, everybody is invited to leave the restaurant and step outside on the island. This dish is not introduced by Chef Julian, but by sous chef Katherine. In her speech, she recalls how she turned Julian’s advances down, which made him ignore her for eight months. Katherine then stabs Julian with kitchen scissors.

As for the course itself, it is called “Man’s Folly,” and is only served to the women. As the female guests are led back into the restaurant, the men are given the opportunity to escape, showing how willing they are to run away and selfishly abandon their close friends, bosses, or significant others. At their tables, from the dungeness crab to the fermented yogurt, the women feast on this representation of the pretentious insecurities of toxic men. Made with mostly ingredients from the sea, it also symbolizes the futility of trying to escape.

Passard Egg: Hot-Cold, Sweet & Savory Soft-Boiled Egg

A Traditional Gourmet Dish

the menu movie_passard egg

This special dish is offered last as all the men attempt, and fail, at escaping. It is an egg with crème fraîche and maple. The singling out of Tyler against the other men in this sequence suggests what will happen to Tyler in The Menu next: he does not try and escape and is not exactly like all the other guests. Contrary to the others, it is revealed later that Tyler knew the dinner guests would die from the beginning.

Curiously, the Passard Egg is a typical dish served at gourmet restaurants. It’s given as a reward for the last man to be caught trying to escape — found by Chef’s staff hiding inside the island’s chicken coop. Apart from this hilarious connection, serving a fancy soft-boiled egg to the man who gave his best efforts at an essentially futile task adds insult to injury. Even though it was most likely a delicious dish, the genital symbolism is clear.

Tyler’s Bulls**t

Terrible Lamb Cooked By An Even Worse Human Being

Although this was not initially included among The Menu‘s movie dishes, in a twist, it is revealed that Tyler knew he and whoever he goes with was going to die and has knowingly brought Margot with him. Julian humiliates Tyler, making him cook while everybody is observing him and calling his food of undercooked lamb and inedible sauce terrible. He has thus ruined the art of cooking. After Julian whispers something in his ear, Tyler leaves to hang himself. Although viewers do not know what was said to Tyler, it can be imagined that Chef’s disappointment in him and his humiliation led to his suicide.

Birthday Cake

A Surreal Moment Of Levity

Rob Yang In The Menu Trailer
Rob Yang In The Menu Trailer

As Margot is allowed to leave at the end of The Menu, it becomes clear she is different from other guests as Julian asks Margot for her help with the dessert. Although the audience is not shown this, there is another savory course in The Menu, one that Margot does not witness. As Margot returns to the restaurant, one of the diners at the Hawthorn is presented with a cake for his birthday. Whether this was previously planned or just a way to buy some time before Margot returns, it’s simply hilarious to see the murderous staff giving a guest cake and even singing the birthday song like in a normal restaurant.

Supplemental Course: A Cheeseburger

Margot’s Successful Bid For Survival

The cheeseburger is not originally part of The Menu‘s movie dishes, but was made upon Margot’s request. The meaning of the cheeseburger in The Menu is simple. This dish reminds Chef of his love for cooking and for actually feeding somebody else – someone who’s hungry and just wants to enjoy simple, real food. Therefore, he lets Margot leave, taking her cheeseburger to go. As such, the last reminder of Julian will be that of food he truly enjoyed cooking, which is why he began his career. Ultimately, this course is why Margot escapes in The Menu and is the only one who survives.

Final Dessert: S’Mores

The Fiery End To Slowik’s Final Meal

After everybody pays, the staff prepares the final course, the one that, as The Menu ends, will cause the death of everybody on the island. S’Mores may be a simple course, even called boring by Chef, but it is often associated with childhood innocence and good memories. Out of The Menu movie’s dishes, this was also the most epic, a fitting finale for everyone involved. Ironically, this dish ends everybody’s life with the fire necessary to make the S’Mores, killing everybody and destroying the restaurant. After all, as explained multiple times throughout The Menu, Chef Julian Slowik’s plan only works if the guests die.

The Menu Movie Poster

The Menu

A darkly comedic horror-thriller, The Menu focuses on a group of diners invited to a high-end restaurant on a private island by one of the world’s greatest chefs. Shortly after arriving on the island, Margot Mills begins to realize something is strange beyond the perceived pompous nature of the menu. Her suspicions are confirmed when the night turns deadly as the restaurant staff begins to descend into a cult-like madness.

Release Date
November 18, 2022

Director
Mark Mylod

Cast
Ralph Fiennes , Anya Taylor-Joy , Nicholas Hoult , Hong Chau , Janet McTeer , Reed Birney , Judith Light , John Leguizamo

Rating
R

Runtime
106 minutes

Studio(s)
Searchlight Pictures