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Cloud Kitchens

October 8, 2020

Kroger Partners With ClusterTruck for In-Store Ghost Kitchens

Grocery mega-retailer Kroger announced today it is launching ghost kitchens at two of its Kroger retail stores. The kitchens will be done in partnership with delivery-only restaurant service ClusterTruck and provide Kroger customers prepared meals free of delivery fees, according to a press release sent to The Spoon.

Kroger and ClusterTruck have been piloting their partnership since 2019. Through it, ClusterTruck sells its restaurant-quality meals via the Kroger Delivery Kitchen website.

To be clear, the ClusterTruck platform is not a tool for selling meals from other restaurants. Rather, ClusterTruck handles the entire meal delivery process, from conceptualizing a menu to ordering the ingredients, cooking the food, and getting meals into customers’ hands. The company also uses its own proprietary tech stack to update menus and process orders and payments. ClusterTruck, which is headquartered in Indianapolis, Ind. and has a sizable presence around the Midwest, brings this end-to-end delivery concept to the Kroger ghost kitchens. The ClusterTruck menu will be available via the Kroger Kitchen Delivery site.

According to today’s press release, the new concept repurposes roughly 1,000 square feet at each store (a typical Kroger store is about 160,000 square feet). This repurposed space will be dedicated to ClusterTruck staff, who will prepare meals for delivery and in-store pickup.

In theory, at least, that means Kroger would not have to rely on third-party delivery services like DoorDash and Postmates for any part of the delivery process for these ghost kitchens. Interestingly, this comes at a time when some of those third-party delivery services are trying to diversify their platform by offering grocery delivery.  

For Kroger’s two new in-store ghost kitchens, one will be located in Indianapolis and the other in Columbus, Ohio. These will follow an on-premises ghost kitchen already open in Fishers, Ind., and one in Dublin, Ohio, which is set to open later this year.

Today’s news is also another piece of evidence that the lines between grocery store and restaurant are overlapping. In addition to the aforementioned third-party delivery services shuttling some grocery orders to customers, Texas-based chain H-E-B recently opened a food hall that delivers restaurant meals, and grocery service Cheetah added restaurant meals to its available offerings. And though the blurring of the lines between restaurants and groceries is a direct result of the pandemic’s closing restaurants and keeping people at home, the trend is unlikely to reverse, even when restaurants can operate at full capacity once more.

One reason for the continued merging of grocery stores and restaurants is the surging popularity of ghost kitchens. Euromonitor recently predicted that the ghost kitchen market will be worth $1 trillion by 2030. That number factors in not just ghost kitchens for restaurants but also spaces for food producers and retailers. The $1 trillion figure may seem a little absurd now, but if more partnerships like the Kroger-ClusterTruck deal emerge, it may soon seem a less outlandish number and more a reality for both the restaurant and grocery industries.

October 4, 2020

Contactless: ‘Easier Said Than Done’

Welcome to the Spoon’s weekly restaurant tech roundup. To subscribe, go here.

Achieving a contactless restaurant experience when it comes to the drive-thru lane is easier said than done, according to QSR Magazine’s 2020 Drive-Thru Study, released today in partnership with SeeLevelHX.

Every year, QSR Magazine’s study looks at various aspects of drive-thru performance, from speed of service to order accuracy to the effectiveness of digital menu boards. This year’s study includes all of those things as well as some elements that wouldn’t have made it in there if not for the COVID-19 pandemic.

The so-called contactless restaurant experience is one of them. If you follow the restaurant biz or are a regular reader of The Spoon, you’ll know that restaurant tech companies large and small have lately been championing software that enables contactless ordering and payments. Instead of a customer and staffer passing a credit card back and forth, guests order and pay from their own mobile phones. 

That goes some distance in keeping unwanted germs at bay, but as we’ve said before, there’s no such thing as a truly contactless restaurant experience right now. And as QSR’s data suggests, there’s no such thing as a truly contactless drive-thru, either. 

The survey found that 80.1 percent of all drive-thru orders were handed to the customer directly by the employee. In 16.4 percent of the cases surveyed, the order was placed on a tray. Rounding out the math, 1.3 percent of orders were placed on a window, and 2.2 percent were labeled “other.” Use your imagination. 

QSR’s survey found that 78.1 percent of employees wear gloves at the drive-thru window, while 91.3 percent wear masks. But the survey’s basic conclusion to all of this is that contactless “proves easier said than done” when it comes to the drive-thru lane.

Unlike a physical restaurant space that can be altered to make room for pickup shelves or lockers, there’s not much in the way of architectural adjustments a drive-thru window can absorb that would make much sense. And actually, one could argue that too many alterations done in the name of contactless service would just confuse things, slow down service, and impair order accuracy. 

If the restaurant industry wants a truly contactless drive-thru experience, it’s going to have to do some major overhauling when it comes to the design of the drive-thru process. Burger King hinted at this a while back with its new restaurant prototype that includes a conveyor belt system for retrieving food and a good deal of re-architecting of the physical store layout, among other things. That’s the first of what will likely be dozens more examples over the next year of what the drive-thru of the future will look like. As to whether the industry can ever achieve one that’s truly contactless, stay tuned.

Device of the Week: TableYeti’s Virtual Tip Jar

Besides having the best company name I’ve heard of in a while, hospitality payments company TableYeti also makes a virtual tip jar product called the “Tap to Tip BOX.” The device, which is powered by TIPJAR’s software, can be mounted to a wall, placed on a countertop or stationed at any other location in a bar or restaurant that’s highly visible to customers. 

On its website, UK-based TableYeti says the BOX is meant to replace TRONC, which is the tipping pool system used in many bars, cafes, and restaurants around the country. Essentially it’s the digital version of the big jar of cash you’ll find next to many cash registers at eating and drinking establishments. Instead of dropping a few bills into the jar, you tap a credit card.

It’s a compelling product in this day and age when so much of the restaurant biz is going digital. It also comes at a time when the concept of a virtual tip jar is a little more widely known, thanks to various efforts to help restaurant industry workers during the height of lockdown. TableYeti’s product joins multiple other iterations of this idea, not just in the U.K. but all over the world.

TableYeti’s BOX is only available to U.K. businesses at the moment, though a U.S. equivalent is bound to surface at some point in the near future as restaurants get further digitized and cash gets increasingly less popular.

More Restaurant News

Food ordering platform Olo this week launched Serve, a revamped version of its ordering platform restaurants can use to consolidate order flows and manage their digital storefronts. The redesigned platform, which Olo says enables faster ordering and checkout and higher conversion rates, is available to all restaurant customers using the Olo platform.

Fast-casual chain Fazoli’s put something of a twist on the dark kitchen/virtual restaurant concept this week. The chain had been using some of its restaurants as dark kitchens to test a delivery-only chicken wing product. Said product has proven to be so popular Fazoli’s said this week it will now go on the chain’s regular brick-and-mortar menu. Which just goes to show you that the definitions of “ghost kitchen” and “dark kitchen” continue to evolve.

Taco Bell just launched the “Taco Gifter” on its website and mobile app that lets users, uh, gift tacos to one another. Pick an item, pay for it, and T. Bell will generate a unique URL the recipient can use to retrieve the order. Somehow I suspect this will be popular with those who need last-minute gift ideas for the holidays.

October 2, 2020

RobinFood Raises $16M for Its Cloud Restaurant Network

Cloud restaurant network RobinFood (née Muy) announced today it has raised a $16 million debt funding round from MGM Sustainable Energy Fund II LP. This brings RobinFood’s total funding to date to $36 million, according to a press release sent to The Spoon.

As Muy, the Colombia-based company made a name for itself around Latin America though its network of ghost kitchens. Muy recently decided to rebrand, bringing both its physical and virtual restaurant initiatives under the same RobinFood brand. 

Customers can order delivery-only meals from multiple different virtual restaurant brands operated by RobinFood, including Muy, Just Burgers, and El Original. Meals can be ordered via the company’s mobile app, or with a touchscreen kiosk at one of its brick-and-mortar locations, which offer limited seating. These physical locations feature automat-like cubbies where customers retrieve the food, essentially eliminating interactions between restaurant staff and customers. RobinFood’s tech stack, meanwhile, merges its virtual restaurants and kitchens and its physical spaces into the same system, for smoother operations. 

The company said in today’s press release that it plans to use the new financing round to continue its growth across Colombia, Mexico, and Brazil, adding 3,500 new “brand-locations” in Latin America over the next five years. Its goal is to sell “more than one billion dollars annually by 2026.”

If that seems like a hefty number, consider that Euromonitor recently predicted the ghost kitchen market would be worth $1 trillion by 2030. Around the world, ghost kitchens and networks of virtual restaurants are taking over at a time when many brick-and-mortar locations are going out of business and the pandemic has fueled a greater desire among consumers for delivery and takeout meals.

RobinFood’s marriage of ghost kitchens and physical spaces is yet-another take on the ever-evolving ghost kitchen model. And the company’s funding to-date suggests there is plenty of opportunity in Latin America for ghost kitchens, and restaurant tech in general.

RobinFood’s news today follows recent fundraises from other ghost kitchen companies, including Indonesia’s Yummy Corporation ($12 million), U.S.-based Virtual Kitchen ($20 million), and iKcon in Dubai ($5 million). 

September 30, 2020

NYC Ghost Kitchen Company Zuul Launches a Virtual Food Hall

NYC-based ghost kitchen operator Zuul announced this week that its virtual food hall, Zuul Market, is now live.

The new initiative is a cross between an online marketplace and a white-label delivery platform. The marketplace sells a limited number of items from restaurants that are currently members of Zuul’s ghost kitchen facility in SoHo, including Junzi Kitchen, Stone Bridge Pizza & Salad, and Sarge’s Deli. Zuul has also worked with its member restaurants to co-create virtual brands, which are also available through the marketplace. For example, Stone Bridge also operates the virtual-only Rival Sandwich Co.

All food is prepped and cooked in the SoHo kitchen facility. Zuul then delivers the food at scheduled times to drop-off points located in office buildings as well as residential properties around NYC. Zuul controls the entire process, from order processing to fulfillment to the last-mile delivery.

The idea is to provide a more efficient system for delivery, where meals from multiple restaurants going to multiple different people can be bulked together and taken to a single location. To do this effectively, Zuul has partnered with Silverstein Properties and Broad Street Development, both major property developers in NYC that own both office buildings and residential properties. Zuul Market menus will be available to residents and employees throughout those companies’ properties. For example, Silverstein integrated Zuul Market into its Inspire app for tenants as a building-wide amenity across its buildings. 

How successful this delivery strategy is in office buildings depends a lot on how many people actually wind up going back to the office. Right now, it’s not many. But residential properties could be a lucrative area for delivery and commerce during the pandemic, and probably after. Folks are spending more time at home these days, and with colder weather coming, that’s likely to increase. So whether it’s automated convenience stores, contact-free delivery pods a la Minnow, or a virtual marketplace like Zuul’s, more and more companies are finding new ways to bring the restaurant experience into the home. 

Zuul said it plans to build additional food hall partnerships with both restaurants and properties in addition to more ghost kitchen facilities across NYC in the future.

September 25, 2020

Yummy Corporation Raises $12M to Expand Its Ghost Kitchen Network

Indonesia-based cloud kitchen management company Yummy Corporation has raised a $12 million Series B round of funding, according to a report from TechCrunch. The round was led by SoftBank Ventures Asia and included participation from new investors AppWorks, Coca Cola Amatil X, Palm Drive Capital, Quest Ventures, and Vectr Ventures. Also participating were existing investors Intudo Ventures and Sovereign’s Capital.

Founded in 2019, Yummy operates a network of fully managed delivery-only kitchens across Jakarta. It rents space to existing food and bev brands, providing them kitchen infrastructure as well as the necessary staff to assist in fulfilling delivery and takeout orders.

The company says it will use the new funds to expand into other cities and further develop its tech platform. 

Which cities Yummy next heads to is yet to be announced, but if they’re anywhere in Southeast Asia, the company will face plenty of competition. Food delivery service GrabFood already operates over 50 ghost kitchens across countries in the region, including Indonesia. Delivery service Gojek also has ghost kitchens in Indonesia and other countries in Southeast Asia and India. 

Earlier this year, Euromonitor said the global ghost kitchen market could be worth $1 trillion by 2030. That may be an absurdly optimistic number, but there’s no denying the popularity of the ghost kitchen particularly since the pandemic forced most of the world into lockdown and turned the traditional restaurant model on its head. In the last few months alone, we’ve seen numerous sizable fundraising rounds from ghost kitchen companies all over the world as well as more networks of virtual restaurants come to market.

Yummy Corporation raised a $7.8 million Series A round in 2019. This new round brings the company’s total funding to $19.8 million.

 

September 20, 2020

Ghost Kitchen, Meet the Automat

Inexplicably, I’ve always wished I could have experienced the Automat in its heyday. Created at the tail-end of the Nineteenth Century, Automats consisted of a wall of cubbies containing simple food and beverage items users could unlock for a nickel. It was essentially fast food before fast food existed.

Fast forward to 2020, and it looks like I may yet be able to experience the concept, albeit a higher-tech version of it.

As we chatted on this week during our Editor podcast, the Automat is making a comeback. That’s thanks to restaurant companies launching cubby systems that are equipped with temperature control functionality and that can be unlocked with a user’s own smartphone. Brooklyn Dumpling Shop is the latest to iterate on the old concept, following in the footsteps of Minnow, Brightloom (née Eatsa), and others.

The resurgence makes sense, given the restaurant industry’s sudden shift to off-premises formats and simpler foods that travel well. Which is why I can think of no better location for Automat 2.0 than outside a ghost kitchen.

One of the major selling points for ghost kitchens is that they allow restaurants to operate without incurring the costs of a front-of-house operation. The ghost kitchen as we know it is also specifically designed to serve off-premises formats. Up to now, that’s been primarily delivery, but the pandemic has generated so much interest in ghost kitchens that we’re now seeing different styles of the concept emerge, including those that offer pickup. Kitchen United lists both options on its website, as does DoorDash (for its DoorDash Kitchens facility). Having a pickup option means restaurants can still take advantage of the ghost kitchen format without necessarily coughing up the sky-high commission fees associated with delivery orders.

At the same time, the pandemic continues, and even if it were to magically disappear tomorrow, our heightened expectations around cleanliness and “contactless” restaurant experiences are here to stay. Which is to say, customers are going to want minimized human contact for restaurant transactions for a long time to come. 

It doesn’t get more minimized than the Automat. By way of a hypothetical example, imagine a virtual deli that has a kitchen space from which it fulfills online orders. It would fulfill delivery orders, but also maintain a cubby system outside to hold any pickup orders. Throw a few tables and chairs near the machine where those who want can eat onsite. Other than the smartphones and the digital ordering, the setup isn’t hugely different from the original Automat concept.

Of course, some ghost kitchen companies choose to locate their facilities in former warehouse districts that don’t get much foot traffic. But as we outlined in our recent Spoon Plus report on ghost kitchens, that’s the exception, rather than the norm right now. Most ghost kitchen operators will tell you location matters, and the closer you can locate one to customers, the better.

And actually, we’re already trekking towards this automat-in-a-ghost kitchen future. Besides the above examples, Starbucks launched its Express stores in 2019 that act as ghost kitchens for nearby locations and include a wall of pickup lockers onsite. Other fast food chains have whittled their dining room concepts down to more to-go-friendly formats, and many of these orders are now being fulfilled in ghost kitchens.  

Automats were originally a precursor to fast food. These days, it seems like fast food may yet prove to be the forerunner to Automat 2.0.

This is the web version of our newsletter. Sign up today to get updates on the rapidly changing nature of the food tech industry.

Location-based Picnicking

You may remember a year or so ago when I wrote about Domino’s partnering with a company called what3words to delivery food to street corners, parks, and other non-traditional addresses. 

It seems what3words is at it again with food delivery, this time partnering with Honest Burgers in London to deliver to random swaths of grass in the city’s Clapham district.

What3words’ platform divides the entire world into 3m x 3m squares, which are GPS coordinates. An algorithm then converts the coordinates into three-word addresses to give each a unique (and often bizarre) name (see image above). With this technology, you could literally choose a random patch of a park sans any notable landmarks or other identifiable items and get your burger delivered to your exact location.

The program with Honest Burgers is only running for a few days and restricted to Clapham. But with more of the restaurant experience taking place outside the four walls of the business, a technology like this could become huge. That’s assuming the restaurant biz makes it through winter and and once more heads to outdoor spaces.

Cracker Barrel’s gone the ghost kitchen route. The company said at its earnings call this week that it plans to convert one of its locations in Indianapolis, Ind. to a ghost kitchen that will handle large-scale catering orders as well as some individual orders placed via third-party delivery services. The store will also be used to help fulfill delivery orders from other nearby Cracker Barrel locations during busy times, like the upcoming fall/winter holiday season.

Meanwhile, Shake Shack said this week it has expanded curbside pickup to 40 percent of its stores, and that roughly one third of all app orders are being placed for curbside. The company has plans to extend curbside to 50 of its locations by the end of September, and is also exploring the possibility of more drive-thrus and walk-up windows.

The New York City Council passed a bill that lets restaurants add a “COVID-19 surcharge” of up to 10 percent to a customer’s bill for up to 90 days after indoor dining reaches full capacity. In other words, for the foreseeable future. The bill is an attempt to help restaurants generate additional revenue as the struggle to keep the lights on continues.

September 16, 2020

Kbox Global Raises £12M to Expand Its Virtual Restaurant Network

Virtual restaurant platform Kbox Global announced this week it has raised £12 million (~$15.5 million USD) to expand its food delivery concept. The round was led by London-based venture firm Balderton Capital, according to a press release sent to The Spoon.

Founded in 2019 in London, Kbox operates more than 30 delivery-only restaurant brands. It licenses these brands, along with a technology stack, to restaurants and other foodservice operations looking for incremental revenue to add to their businesses.  

To do this, Kbox assesses each restaurant, including its location and main demographic, then uses those factors to choose the most relevant virtual restaurant brands for the business to offer. Restaurants cook and fulfill the orders themselves, with their existing staff, while Kbox’s tech stack integrates with third-party delivery services that handle the last mile of the delivery.

The company says there are no upfront fees for restaurants looking to utilize this concept, which is a way for restaurants to diversify their food offerings without investing in a full brick-and-mortar operation. In essence, restaurants are turning themselves into ghost kitchens for Kbox brands by partnering with the company.

The idea of one restaurant licensing and running a completely different brand from a third-party is a more recent development in the world of ghost kitchens, though Kbox isn’t alone in expanding the concept. Chicago-based Wow Bao said in April it was licensing its own menu to other restaurant brands in much the same manner as Kbox. Some Fatburger locations double as ghost kitchens for the chain’s sister brand Hurricane Grill & Wings. And let’s not forget about the celebrities launching their own virtual restaurant brands that existing businesses cook and fulfill. 

Needless to say, restaurants need any extra revenue they can get right now, thanks to the pandemic shuttering dining rooms left and right and all but forcing many brands to go the ghost kitchen route. However, we’ve yet to see many numbers about how financially fruitful it is to run a third-party brand out of one’s own restaurant kitchen.

For its part, Kbox says it is on track to have 2,000 of these kitchens in the UK before the end of 2021, and is also in the midst of an international expansion. The company has franchise agreements in Australia and India and says operations will launch in another eight countries at some point next year. The new capital from Balderton will support this expansion, as well as help Kbox establish a presence in the U.S. in earl 2021.

September 9, 2020

Ghost Kitchen Network Virtual Kitchen Raises $20M

Virtual Kitchen, a company founded by two ex-Uber executives, has raised $20 million in new funding, according to a filing with the SEC (h/t Restaurant Dive). The round was led by Founders Fund and brings Virtual Kitchen’s total funding to $37 million. 

Virtual Kitchen runs multiple “delivery-optimized kitchens” where restaurants can rent space and also take advantage of the company’s technology to scale up operations quickly. Delivery fulfillment is done through partnerships with Grubhub, Uber Eats, Postmates, DoorDash and other third-party services. 

It’s unclear at this time what Virtual Kitchen will do with the new funds, though Restaurant Dive suggests the San Francisco-based company is likely to focus on expanding its network of ghost kitchens.

Now would certainly be the time to do that. As we detailed in a recent Spoon Plus report, the market for ghost kitchens is enormous — trekking towards $1 trillion by some accounts. As a business model, the ghost kitchen was already becoming an attractive option for more and more restaurants before the COVID-19 pandemic ever hit and decimated the restaurant industry. Since then, delivery and other off-premises formats have become priorities for large chains and mom-and-pop joints alike, and there’s no setting more logical for fulfilling all these to-go orders than a ghost kitchen. 

Given all that, the recent activity in the ghost kitchen space shouldn’t surprise. Kitchen United continues to expand across the U.S. Kitopi raised $20 million this year. Zuul raised $9 million for its NYC-focused ghost kitchen operation, Dubai-based iKcon raised $5 million, and that’s but a smattering of the recent developments in this sector. 

Virtual Kitchen’s new funding follows last year’s $15 million investment from Andreessen Horowitz and Base10 Partners. 

September 1, 2020

Galley Solutions’ Founders Talk Recipes, Data, and What It Will Take to Build a Better Food System

In the food world, San Diego-based tech startup Galley Solutions is perhaps best known for its software system that uses recipe-level data to automate the restaurant back of house. But founders Benji Koltai and Ian Christopher have much bigger plans for the role they want their company to play in creating a more efficient, accurate, and safer food system overall.

I recently hopped on a Zoom chat with Koltai and Christopher — who also happen to be brothers-in-law — to talk about their vision for the future food system, how a system like Galley’s can contribute, and what foodservice businesses can do right now to make their operations more efficient.

You can watch the full video below. Some highlights include:

  • The definition of “food business” is changing as we speak, from college dining halls now offering grab ’n’ go meals to ghost kitchens operating out of grocery stores.
  • Moving forward, restaurants must learn to leverage their recipe-level data to make operations more efficient, cut overall costs, and save on labor and time to accommodate these new formats.
  • Technology is everywhere in the foodservice world, yet for all the different devices and solutions, there is no common dataset to bring those disparate pieces together.
  • A truly efficient back-of-house system will use one source for all the business’s data. For example, a centralized data source could populate the digital order forms sent to vendors and at the same time tell the kitchen robot how long to leave a burger on the grill.

August 27, 2020

From Wiz Khalifa to Tyga, Are Celebrity Ghost Kitchens the Next Big Thing?

Throughout the latter half of 2019, a prediction that came up repeatedly here at The Spoon was celebrity chefs launching their own virtual restaurant concepts. What we didn’t anticipate was just plain ol’ celebrities getting onboard the trend, but that’s exactly what’s happening now.

An announcement this week from delivery integrator Ordermark added more momentum to the celebrity-as-virtual restauranteur trend: rapper Wiz Khalifa forthcoming Hotbox concept.

Wiz Khalifa’s Hotbox restaurant, which is slated to open October 1, will feature a “top-shelf munchie menu” curated by the rapper and powered by Ordermark. The full menu is not available yet, though a couple featured items — the “Taylor Gang Turkey Burger” and “Blazed Ends” dishes — give a pretty good idea of what to expect once the restaurant launches.

Restaurant owners wanting to cook and deliver the forthcoming Hotbox menu from their own kitchens can do so by becoming a fulfillment partner via Nextbite, the delivery-only restaurant company owned by Ordermark. In other words, your local mom-and-pop can now become a ghost kitchen for the Wiz Khalifa brand. That in turn could provide restaurants with some much-needed incremental revenue that might keep some from completely going under during this strange and challenging time for restaurants. 

Cooking someone else’s menu from your own restaurant kitchen isn’t a brand-new concept. As I said, it’s a form of a ghost kitchen that’s employed by the likes of well-known chains like Fatburger and Wow Bao. Tacking a celebrity name to the concept is an intriguing twist on this. A virtual Wiz Khalifa restaurant will generate a certain amount of interest inherently because of the rapper’s status. And if the food winds up being tasty and affordable, there’s potential for restaurants to tap into a Khalifa’s huge fanbase. 

The celebrity-turned-restauranteur thing isn’t brand-new, either, though it’s only been in the last several months we’ve seen this concept go virtual. Rapper Tyga operates a delivery-only restaurant featuring chicken bites. Steve Aoki has a virtual pizza joint called Pizzaoki. Rachel Ray, launched a limited-time virtual restaurant with Uber Eats last year.

And with off-premises orders still the main sales channel for restaurants, delivery companies looking to diversify, and ghost kitchens becoming the norm, the above examples are just the tip of the proverbial iceberg. 

August 23, 2020

Can Ghost Kitchens Save the Vanishing Restaurant Biz?

“Perhaps we should stop using the term ghost kitchen. Ghosts are rarely seen, but ghost kitchens? Well, they are popping up everywhere.”

Spoon Editor Chris Albrecht was half-kidding when he wrote that line earlier this week, but he might have been onto something. Ghost kitchens, a concept that only really started turning heads one year ago, are practically unavoidable these days in a conversation about the restaurant industry. 

In the past few weeks alone:

  • Foodservice distribution giant US Foods launched its own ghost kitchen service that will provide restaurants “guidance and resources” to open their own kitchens.
  • Gig economy engagement platform ShiftPixy unveiled a ghost kitchen incubator that connects restaurants with physical kitchen space and the tech to run a ghost kitchen.
  • Dubai-based iKcon, raised $5 million to expand its kitchen network and the proprietary tech stack that goes with it.
  • Fat Brands announced that Johnny Rockets, a brand it intends to purchase for $25 million, will expand via ghost kitchens, many of them inside the kitchens of other Fat Brands restaurants.
  • Sweetgreen said it is testing the ghost kitchen concept out by working from a Zuul kitchen in NYC.

And those are just the highlights.

What’s noteworthy here is not that a bunch more restaurants and food industry companies have hopped aboard the ghost kitchen train. It’s that there are a fast-growing number of options when it comes to where and how a restaurant can open a ghost kitchen. With a company like iKcon, for example, a restaurant’s ghost kitchen essentially becomes a franchisee. Renting space from Zuul or another third-party kitchen provider is another way. Operating one brand out of the kitchen of a sister brand is perhaps the most intriguing concept on this list, and one we’ll see a lot more of in the future.

Add to all that choices around location, technology, and figuring out if they even have enough demand to warrant a ghost kitchen, and restaurants have a lot to consider in today’s off-premises-centric world.

What’s more, those restaurants are being forced to consider their choices when it comes to ghost kitchens. The pandemic has decimated the dine-in business for both large restaurant chains and smaller independent businesses. Recovery from the fallout will be slow, and the idea of most customers returning to brick-and-mortar restaurants seems less possible each week. Given those factors, more restaurants will have to consider either supplementing their existing operations with ghost kitchens or pivoting their entire model to a virtual, delivery-only one.

I suspect this is just the beginning when it comes to types of ghost kitchens that rise out of the ashes of the on-premises restaurant experience. We’ve already seen restaurants employ countless amounts of creativity when it comes to running a restaurant during a pandemic and trying to create a concrete restaurant experience out of virtual tools. With the pandemic still very much a part of our lives, we will now see that creativity head for the ghost kitchen.

SipScience Raises Money to Reinvent the Bar

SipScience, a data analytics company specifically for the hospitality industry, is preparing to launch itself into the contactless payments realm by launching a new platform, Sip. 

According to a press release sent to The Spoon this week, there are two sides to Sip. The consumer-facing one comes in the form of an app that connects to a user’s digital wallet. The app lets said user find nearby bars and open a tab from their own mobile device, through which they can order and pay for drinks. When it launches, Sip will be available at participating bars and venues across the U.S. Bonus: those who sign up for a subscription will get half off their first 50 drinks ordered through the app.

For venues, such as bars and restaurants, the app is a new way to drive more traffic, and the accompanying SipSync analytics engine gives these places more data on in-venue customers. Brands, too, are provided with real-time purchasing data, which is not something a payments app normally provides.

The company said this week it had raised $1.3 million in SAFE notes. There is no official launch date yet for the app, which makes sense, given the state of in-person hospitality venues. Bars in many states remain closed, as to venues built to hold hundreds of people. 

Granted, no sane person would spend much time in a bar right now. But SipScience’s news suggests that folks start flocking back to their local watering holes, they’ll find a far more tech-driven experience waiting.

Restaurant Tech ‘Round the Web

Starbucks launched a digital traceability tool this week that lets customers learn more about their coffee, including where it came from and traveled, and the farmers and roasters involved in production.

Domino’s is hiring 20,000 more employees. That’s on top of the 10,000 the pizza chain said it was hiring right after the pandemic hit, and just goes to show you that the company’s delivery-centric business is alive and thriving. 

Grubhub has launched an online petition to commission fee caps and is reportedly going to run an ad campaign that calls the fee caps “food delivery taxes.” Grubhub says fee caps result in higher costs for consumers and ultimately hurt restaurants. 

This is the web version of our newsletter. Sign up today to get updates on the rapidly changing nature of the food tech industry.

August 12, 2020

Updated: Whataburger’s Food Truck Set to Tour the U.S. in 2021

Iconic Texas-based QSR chain Whataburger announced this week it has upped its off-premises game with a 36-foot-long food truck that will take a multi-state tour in 2021. 

The forthcoming Whataburger food truck will be a totally mobile kitchen the chain says has “the same kind of burger-making power as a brick-and-mortar restaurant.” Whataburger developed it in partnership with Cruising Kitchens, a well-known food truck manufacturer that has made mobile kitchens for everyone from Hard Rock Cafe to the LA Dodgers. 

Whataburger also says the truck can be used for disaster relief, and honestly in this day and age it isn’t hard to imagine the company reformatting the truck at some point to serve frontline healthcare workers or communities impacted by, say, a hurricane. 

The truck will “tour” U.S. cities where Whataburger already has a presence, as well as those the chain is planning to expand too. That’s in keeping with the general aim of ghost kitchens, which a growing number of QSRs are using to reach customers in new markets or serve more off-premises orders in existing ones. 

While there’s undeniably something fun about a bright orange touring burger truck, it’s also a fairly practical move on the part of Whataburger. Like other chains, it’s had to pivot more of its business to off-premises over the last several months as well as increase its capabilities around mobile ordering. It’s currently operating dining rooms with limited seating, but with the trajectory of the coronavirus still uncertain (and still rising), it’s not unreasonable to think dining rooms might have to shut down in full again before this is all over.

While it’s not technically a ghost kitchen, the forthcoming food truck more or less serves the same purpose, which is to help the chain reach a wider audience and keep operations going even in the face of unprecedented global crises. According to this week’s announcement, Cruising Kitchens founder Cameron Davies has wanted to build a food truck for more than a decade. With the restaurant industry sitting squarely at the crossings of off-premises, ghost kitchens, and more mobility, now seems the perfect time for a test drive.

Note: The original version of this post incorrectly stated that Cameron Davies was CEO of Whataburger.

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