No inflation here: The Masters menu and why is it so cheap?

Part and parcel of going to live sport is paying through the roof for food and drink before getting trapped in a merchandise shop; pressured into spending millions of dollars on shirts, bucket hats and umbrellas. But at the Masters, which takes place across this weekend, that’s not necessarily the case.

Sure you’ll be forking out for merch, but the concessions are famously cheap, and have been frozen in time for 20 years.

A beer will set you back just $5, an array of sandwiches just $3 and Augusta National’s famous Egg Salad sarnie – which looks revolting – is just $1.50. That’s equivalent to £1.20.

But inflation hasn’t left the Masters exempt from some price rises with Crow’s Nest, a beer brewed specifically for the golf Major raising from $5 to $6. The Georgia peach ice cream sandwich is now $3, up from $2.50.

With tickets to the golfing days of the tournament – if you can get one – at around $140 it is clear Masters organisers believe cheap concessions are the way to go.

And we agree!

Taste of the course

But what if you cannot get to the Masters to try their famous menu? Well you can apparently have it at home!

Taste of the Masters kits are available and offer a slice of Augusta.

Although they exclude bread, buns and alcohol, you can pay a fortune for a tub of cheese and egg salad, some popcorn and crisps.

Bizarre.

The Masters menu

ConcessionPrice (USD)Egg Salad$1.50Pimento Cheese$1.50Pork Bar-B-Que$3.00Masters Club$3.00Chicken Salad on Honey Wheat$3.00Classic Chicken$3.00Ham & Cheese on Rye$3.00Masters Blend Fresh Brewed Coffee$1.50Chicken Biscuit$2.00Breakfast Sandwich$3.00Blueberry Muffin$1.50Fresh Mixed Fruit$2.00Soft Drinks$2.00Bottled Water$2.00Fresh Brewed Iced Tea$2.00Domestic Beer$6.00Import Beer$6.00Crow’s Nest$6.00White Wine$6.00Chips (Plain and BBQ)$1.50Peanuts$1.50Southern Cheese Straws$2.00Cookies$1.50Georgia Pecan Caramel Popcorn$1.50Georgia Peach Ice Cream Sandwich$3.00Masters menu

Related posts

Shops being ‘thwacked by colossal’ employment costs

London rents rise again as house prices hold: ‘It is nothing short of brutal’

Brexit hit to UK trade not as bad as first thought