
How Underbelly Hospitality Took Control of their Margins with Data & Discipline
xtraCHEF by Toast helped Underbelly Hospitality achieve $330,000* in annualized food cost savings.
Underbelly Hospitality hired Nina Quincy in 2021 as the Director of Operations, right in the midst of the COVID pandemic and lockdowns.
The Houston-based restaurant group is led by renowned Chef Chris Shepherd. As Chef Chris stepped back to run the company at a high-level, the new chefs needed to learn how to do what he was doing before. This is where xtraCHEF by Toast was pivotal in helping them all reassess how they ran the operation.
Nina and the Underbelly chefs have navigated the ongoing operational challenges that so many restaurants have had to endure — the closures, pivots, and re-openings. The situation forced them to take a closer look at their menu prices and margins.
In Nina’s short tenure, the group has branched out from Montrose, the hip, foodie neighborhood where all their restaurants were located prior to 2021, and opened new ventures throughout the greater Houston area.
While they have a lot of optimism for what’s ahead, it took hard work, new systems, and discipline for them to get here. Now here they are, with Nina’s corporate background combining with xtraCHEF by Toast to help Underbelly achieve $330,000* in annualized food cost savings.
With the help of xtraCHEF by Toast, Underbelly Hospitality Group was able to reduce costs by 3% on average across their locations — saving them over $330,000* on the year.
*These results are self-reported by the customer. Individual results will vary.
“Revenue buys forgiveness. If you’re a $6 million restaurant, there’s a lot of forgiveness in those numbers, but when you're now a $1.8 million, oh man all of your flaws are glaring. - Nina Quincy, Director of Operations at Underbelly Hospitality”
Balancing instincts with insights for more prescriptive costing
When Nina joined the team last year, she quickly realized that no one was actually costing out recipes and menu items. Before using xtraCHEF, she says that pricing and costing was often “better lucky than good.”

