The best dishes to sell for profit in Beastro aren't about their direct coin value, but about crafting powerful combat decks that let your Caretakers win fights and bring back rare, valuable loot. The most consistently profitable dish for mid-game progression is a well-built Twin-Flavor Broth using an enhancement pair like Umami and Sour. However, the single most valuable dish for pure earnings is the late-game Seared Cube-Fin, made from a rare fish caught at night.

This guide breaks down the true meaning of profit in Beastro and shows you exactly what to cook, from your first day in Palo Pori to your endgame fortune.

Why “Profit” in Beastro Isn't Just About Coin

Unlike a typical restaurant sim, you don't really "sell" food to customers in Beastro. You serve meals to Caretakers, and every single ingredient you use builds their deck of cards for combat. [3] The meal is the strategy. A "profitable" dish is one that creates a winning deck, allowing your Caretaker to defeat powerful monsters and complete their expedition. Success brings back rare monster parts, unlocks new areas, and rewards you with the resources needed for top-tier restaurant and garden upgrades—the real path to wealth.

Focusing on coin value alone will leave you stuck. A cheap dish might save you a few ingredients, but if it creates a weak deck that causes your Caretaker to fail, you've lost far more than you saved. The core gameplay loop is: Better Food → Stronger Decks → More Wins → Better Loot → True Profit.

The Early Game Engine: Mastering the Umami Starter Deck

In the early game, your focus is on supporting the first Caretaker, Oyshi. He prefers Umami-flavored dishes, and the enemies in the first region also heavily feature Umami cards. [4] This creates a clear strategic path. You need to build a deck that can deal Umami damage while also defending against enemy Umami attacks. This is where flavor pairings come in.

Your First Profitable Recipe: Palo Pori Stir-fry

This isn't an official recipe, but a strategic template for your first dozen expeditions. The goal is to create a dish with a strong Umami base, enhanced by Sour ingredients and balanced by Bitter ones. [3]

  • Primary Flavor (70%): Umami. Use ingredients like mushrooms and hearty greens from your garden. This will form the backbone of Oyshi's attack cards.
  • Enhancement Flavor (20%): Sour. Foraged berries and specific herbs provide Sour cards, which boost the power of your Umami cards when played together. [4]
  • Balance Flavor (10%): Bitter. A small amount of a bitter ingredient, like a specific root, adds a crucial defensive card. Playing a Bitter card against an enemy's Umami card will reduce its effectiveness, keeping Oyshi safe. [3]

By focusing your cooking this way, you ensure Oyshi has a reliable, effective deck for clearing the early game content, which is far more profitable than trying to sell random low-tier dishes.

Beastro in-game screenshot

Beastro in-game screenshot

The Mid-Game Leap: Crafting Twin-Flavor Masterpieces

As you enter the second chapter, you'll find that single-flavor decks no longer cut it. Enemies begin using modifiers that can punish a deck without varied responses. [4] This is where the concept of "Enhancement Pairs" becomes the most important—and profitable—strategy in the game.

An enhancement pair consists of two flavors that boost each other. Building a dish around one of these pairs creates a deck with powerful, built-in synergy. For Oyshi, this means doubling down on the Umami/Sour combination.

Flavor Pair TypePrimary FlavorPaired FlavorEffect
EnhancementUmamiSourBoosts your own card power.
EnhancementBitterSaltyBoosts your own card power.
EnhancementSweetSpicyBoosts your own card power.
BalanceUmamiBitterWeakens the enemy's card power.
BalanceSourSpicyWeakens the enemy's card power.
BalanceSweetSaltyWeakens the enemy's card power.

Your Mid-Game Workhorse: The Twin-Flavor Broth

To break through the mid-game wall, your go-to profitable dish should be a 50/50 split of Umami and Sour ingredients. This creates a deck that is not only powerful but also consistent. You'll draw cards that naturally work together, allowing Oyshi to unleash his strongest abilities which are tied to his preferred flavors. [4] A dish with five Umami ingredients and five Sour ingredients will reliably defeat most mid-game encounters, bringing in a steady flow of high-quality monster parts and resources.

Beastro in-game screenshot

Beastro in-game screenshot

The True Money-Maker: Hunting the Legendary Cube Fish

While strategic deckbuilding is the foundation of your economy, there is one dish that stands out for its high direct value. According to veteran players, night fishing can yield the incredibly rare Cube Fish, an ingredient used to make the most valuable dish in the game. [6]

Unlocking the Seared Cube-Fin

This endgame pursuit is your key to immense wealth and restaurant appeal.

  1. Unlock Night Fishing: Progress through the main story until you help the town's fisherman, which will eventually open up the option to fish after sunset.
  2. Find the Right Spot: The Cube Fish is rumored to appear most frequently in the quiet cove past the Crystal Caverns, but only on nights with a full moon. You'll need specific high-tier bait, often crafted from rare insects or smaller fish.
  3. Cook the Dish: The recipe for Seared Cube-Fin is simple, requiring only the Cube Fish and a pinch of Salty seasoning. The result is a meal that provides a massive boost to restaurant appeal and, when served, creates an incredibly powerful and versatile deck for any Caretaker.

Farming and cooking this dish is the ultimate expression of profit in Beastro. It requires mastering the game's systems to even acquire the core ingredient, and the reward is a dish that excels in both direct value and combat effectiveness.

Beastro in-game screenshot

Beastro in-game screenshot

Your Kitchen Supply Chain: Fueling the Profit Engine

Even the best recipes are useless without the right ingredients. A truly profitable chef is also an efficient farmer and forager. Your daily routine is critical.

  • The Garden: This is your primary source of base ingredients for flavors like Sweet, Salty, and Bitter. At the start of each day, plant seeds, water crops, and feed your animals to ensure a steady supply. [2]
  • Foraging Runs: In the early game, foraging is the only reliable way to get certain Umami and Sour ingredients. [4] A quick run through the woods or along the river each day keeps your flavor options diverse and prevents your decks from becoming stale.
  • Fishing: Don't neglect fishing, even before you start hunting for the Cube Fish. Many fish provide unique flavor profiles and are required for specific high-tier recipes that can give you an edge in combat.
  • Upgrades: Visit the town merchant Thea regularly to buy upgrades for your garden and restaurant. [2] Better cooking stations are particularly important, as hitting "Fantastic" ratings during the cooking minigames results in higher-power cards for your Caretakers. [4]

Frequently Asked Questions About Making Money in Beastro

Is it better to sell raw ingredients or cooked dishes?

Always cook your ingredients. While you can sell raw materials for a small amount of coin, their true value is unlocked when cooked into a dish. A cooked meal directly translates into combat power and progression, which is far more valuable than the pocket change from selling a raw mushroom.

Do Caretaker preferences really affect profit?

Absolutely. Serving a Caretaker their preferred flavors, like giving Oyshi an Umami-heavy meal, improves their spirit and unlocks their most powerful combat abilities. [4] A happy, powerful Caretaker wins more fights, which is the core of your economic engine.

What's the fastest way to make money at the very start?

The fastest way to build momentum is to forage for Sour and Umami ingredients to complement your basic garden vegetables. [4] Cook a balanced Umami/Sour/Bitter dish for Oyshi to guarantee early combat success. Use the rewards to immediately upgrade your garden and cooking stations.

How do kitchen upgrades impact profitability?

Kitchen upgrades are a top priority. Upgraded stations make it easier to achieve high-quality results in the cooking minigames. A "Fantastic" quality dish generates significantly stronger cards than a "Good" quality dish made with the same ingredients. [4] Better cards mean more victories and better loot.

The Final Take

Stop thinking about profit in Beastro as a simple transaction. Your kitchen is not a shop; it's a war room. The value of a dish is measured in the strength of the deck it creates. Master the flavor system, cater to your Caretakers' tastes, and build a supply chain that can fuel synergistic, twin-flavor recipes. Do that, and the money, rare materials, and ultimate success will follow naturally.