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meetup

November 28, 2018

Three CEOs on How Tech is Transforming the Restaurant Experience

When the famed L.A. institution Canter’s Deli opened an outpost in the first Kitchen United (KU) location, the first visitors were two elderly ladies. They had read about the new Canter’s location in the paper and stopped in for some piping-hot matzo ball soup. “That’s when I thought ‘Uh Oh,’” said Jim Collins, CEO of KU.

What these ladies didn’t understand is that restaurants operating out of KU commercial kitchen spaces are delivery-only, meant to give kitchens a low-cost way to serve the growing demand for food delivery without having to open up a new location.

The advent of cloud kitchens is just one of the trends is just one of the topics tackled during the Future of Restaurants panel at our L.A. food tech meetup yesterday. Also onstage was Alex Canter (yes, that Canter), CEO of Ordermark (and heir to the aforementioned deli), which helps restaurants streamline delivery order fulfillment, and Christine Schindler, CEO of Pathspot, which makes a device that uses visible fluorescent spectroscopy to scan restaurant employee’s hands to check for foodborne illness. Here are a few of the most salient points (and questions) the speakers raised about the evolving restaurant world — where we are, where we’re headed, and what has to change to get us there.

Restaurants need to adapt fast, or prepare to fail
Not all restaurant owners are tech-savvy — they’re incredibly busy, and some think that technology is just one more thing to add to their overly-full plate. But in a world where more and more people expect their favorite joints to offer services like delivery and online reservations, resistance can prove fatal.

“Brick and mortar businesses are learning to become digital businesses,” said Canter. Which isn’t always an easy transition — or one that restaurants one to take. He said that while there are 800,000 restaurants in the U.S., only 12 percent of them offer delivery. Part of the reason for this is because they don’t want to have to take on the tricky task of managing multiple delivery ordering services.

For Schindler, it’s critical to get adoption from both restaurant owners and workers. And she has a lot of out-of-the-box ways to get people to use PathSpot. “We put a lot of games in our device,” she said. Employees can win prizes for getting clean hand scans, and they also encourage friendly competitions between stores to see whose hands are cleaner.

Collins, however, isn’t willing to spend as much time encouraging restaurants to adopt. “My job isn’t to convince someone that the future is coming, my job is to help someone face the future they already recognize is upon them.” Deep, yes; dramatic, yes — but in a world where the majority of restaurants fail and the remainders survive off of razor-thin margins, survival will most likely mean embracing technology.

Where is there room for innovation?
For Collins, the answer is simple: personalization. He compared restaurants today to the search engine marketplace of 30 years ago. Search engines used to display results based on who paid them the most, then “The Big G” (as Collins called them) came in and started showing results based on what was most relevant to the user. (Full disclosure: Google is an investor in Kitchen United.) “These days, we serve a consumer that’s interested in their own dietary preferences,” he said. “If you’re gluten-free, why do you see menu where 80 percent of the items have gluten? Why don’t you see one that only shows the 20 percent that’s not? That’s what I’m looking for.”

Canter pointed to the gig economy, but not in food delivery. “I’d like to see more [on-demand economy] for labor,” he said. While companies like Pared are leveraging the sharing economy to provide short-term BOH workers, like dishwashers and line cooks, “it’s pretty nascent,” said Canter.

Schindler, unsurprisingly, had her eye on food safety. “We need a holistic sanitation solution,” she said. “It’s crazy that the best solution now is an Employees Must Wash Hands sign.”

Do you have to be from restaurants to help transform them?
“If you don’t understand restaurants, you can’t be in the business of serving restaurants,” said Collins. His point was that restaurant management is just too complex: if you don’t have a deep understanding of what it means to work in a restaurant — from busboy to bartender — it’ll be very difficult to successfully run a restaurant.

But sometimes an outsider’s perspective is valuable. Schindler had never worked in the restaurant industry before founded Pathspot. But while working in rural Tanzania, she saw a problem (food-borne illness) that could be solved by the pathogen-spotting technology she was working on in her healthcare job. By applying tech previously silo-ed in the healthcare world, she could help prevent an issue that has been plaguing food companies — especially as of late. Maybe more technologies developed for other markets (blockchain, anyone?) could have a lasting impact on the restaurant world, too.

Thanks to all who came out to ToolBox LA for our food tech meetup yesterday! Keep an eye out for future meetups on our events page.

November 13, 2018

We’re Taking Our Food Tech Meetups on the Road to Los Angeles!

On November 27th we’re taking our food tech meetups on the road to the sunny Los Angeles area! We’re teaming up with hardware VC firm Make in L.A. for this a half-day event highlighting innovative makers, startups, and investors that are leveraging technology to shape our relationship with food. Here’s what we have in store:

  • Short talks and Q&A’s from the founders of Ordermark, Pathspot, and Kitchen United, plus a panel with all three companies on how they’re shaping the future of the restaurant.
  • The founder of Somabar will talk about how robots can help us live, eat, and drink better.
  • DishDivvy’s CEO will discuss how her company is democratizing home food businesses and bringing the sharing economy to dinner.
  • We’ll wrap things up with a VC panel on strategies for investing in companies disrupting food industries with leaders from Make in L.A., Upfront Ventures and Valley Oak Investments.

Oh, and there will be plenty of time for networking and lunch from a taco food truck, of course.

If you’re in the L.A. area and are interested in the food tech space we’d love to have you join us. The event will be from 10am-2pm  at MiLA’s innovation hub Toolbox LA in Chatsworth, CA. Registration is free thanks to our sponsors Fenwick & West and the Silicon Valley Bank. See you there!

August 29, 2018

Robots, Instagram, and Flan: Highlights from our Future of Restaurants Meetup

For our latest food tech meetup, we decided to do things a little bit differently. We were lucky enough to work with Chef Eric Rivera (formerly of Alinea in Chicago) and host the event at his new incubator space, addo.

We knew Chef and his team had high standards, but we were still blown away when we walked in the door. Addo is a creative culinary mind’s dream: the space is a coffeeshop during the day and plays host to pop-up dinners, cooking classes, and community get-togethers (Mario Kart tournaments, salsa classes, etc.) during the evening and weekends. “Basically, it allows me to do whatever I want,” he said.

That means that he lets chefs — usually ones who are up-and-coming or have been recently let go — to host pop-up dinners there, and fills the pastry case with locals who want somewhere to display their baking chops. The space opened its doors 2 months ago and already has a staff of 20.

Part of the reason that Rivera could even create a place like addo is because of new technology. When he returned to Seattle to cook after working in the legendary Alinea, where he was Director of Culinary, Rivera hit a lot of roadblocks. People told him he couldn’t start a restaurant without a certain amount of money, or investors. But Rivera decided to forge ahead and create a space inspired by his own struggles — powered, at least partially, by technology. Culinary booking services like Tock allowed him to do things like host 2-seat dinners out of his home kitchen before he got the addo space, and food delivery from his current operation pads his business.

A schedule of addo events
A schedule of addo events
The pastry case
The pastry case

Over a Puerto Rican meal of roast pork with chimichurri, fried plantains, and flan (Rivera’s mom’s recipe), the chef joined The Spoon’s Michael Wolf and Modernist Cuisine’s Scott Heimendinger in a conversation about how technology big and small is changing the restaurant — from robotics to sous vide to Instagram.

Instagram may seem relatively banal when it comes to restaurant tech — after all, most of us use it to post food pictures all the time — but for bootstrapped entrepreneurs like Rivera, it’s been game changing. “I don’t have the money to hire a marketing or PR firm,” said Rivera. Instead, he uses Instagram as a marketing platform, as well as a way to target certain demographics.

It’s also a tool for him to tap into another trend we cover a lot in the food tech space: personalization. When diners reserve a spot online, Rivera has them fill out a questionnaire to get their dining preferences, but he also does a little sleuthing on their social profiles to see what restaurants they like to eat in, food preferences, etc. It’s a little Minority Report-y maybe, but when you’re paying a hefty price, you want each dish on the menu to be something you really want to eat.

Chef Rivera in front of his beloved smart oven.

Of course, we also had to cover a contentious subject for the future of restaurants: robots. “Robots are better than people for almost everything,” said Heimendiner. Especially for when you need to do something that’s highly repeatable or requires lots of accuracy.

Which is obviously useful in places with high volume and basic tasks, like flipping burgers. In Rivera’s kitchen, at least, robots won’t be replacing people — they’ll just help them do their jobs better. That might be an exoskeleton to help workers unload heavy boxes of produce, or Roombas vacuuming up at the end of the day.

Possibly the best leftovers plate we’ve ever seen.

For restaurants, food delivery is a blessing — and a curse. It can increase overall sales, capturing people too lazy to get off the couch, but on the flip side it also reduces foot traffic. Heimendinger made an interesting comparison: “The trend in ordering delivery from restaurants follows a little bit the trend of going to the movies,” he said. People are streaming movies at home instead of going to theaters, and are ordering food delivery instead of dining out. “This will change some of the function of a restaurant’s physical form,” predicted Heimendinger. He thinks it won’t be just a space to eat food: it will also, more than already, be a place to relax, meet up, have a meeting, etc. Which changes the business model. “It turns it into a community space,” he explained, “Not just a dinner table.”

Addo is certainly more than just a dinner table. Based on the interest we saw last night in addo’s far-ranging dining experience and community vibe, I wouldn’t be surprised to see a lot more incubators popping up in the future.

Want to hear more of Chef Rivera’s perspective on how technology can help lighten the load of restaurant workers and open up new revenue streams? He’ll be speaking at the Smart Kitchen Summit in Seattle on October 8-9th — get your tickets now! 

We ended the night by making some crepes with the Hestan Cue!

May 1, 2018

Come Explore The Future of Meat at our May Food Tech Meetup

It’s time for the next event in our monthly food tech meetup series! We’ll be exploring a subject that’s been making a lot of headlines recently: the future of meat. Join us on Thursday, May 24th at Galvanize Seattle for drinks, snacks, and some rousing discussion. (Bonus: it’s free to attend, thanks to our sponsor ChefSteps!)

The Future of Meat

We’re at a crossroads: meat consumption is on the rise, but demand for meat alternatives has never been higher. And technology is changing the way we create, market, and eat animal products. From plant-based chicken nuggets to lab-grown burgers to transparent distribution channels for high-quality steak and pork, our panelists will discuss how technology is disrupting the meat industry — and what they think meat will look like in 5, 10, and 50 year’s time.

The panel will include:

–Christie Lagally, Seattle Food Tech

–Dr. Isaac Emery, the Good Food Institute

–Ethan Lowry, Crowd Cow

-Catherine Lamb, The Spoon

There will be drinks and snacks, so come hungry and ready to meet the Seattle food tech community — and bring a few business cards while you’re at it. Register here to reserve your spot!

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