Following in the footsteps of fast casuals branching out into the pizzeria territory, Subway plans to open Subway Pizza Express at University of Nebraska-Lincoln in early 2014. The concept focuses on customizable, made-to-order personal pizzas. Pricing will be similar to Subway’s, falling in the $4-6 range per pizza.
Shake Shack Moscow Opens Today
With a couple of modifications including a small price increase for the Shackburger and a concrete dubbed The Great Wintry Way, Shake Shack Moscow is identical to its foreign predecessors. Russian speakers can read the menu in Cyrillic on the Shake Shake site; however New York Magazine has provided a user-friendly translation.
Pizzerias Look to Chipotle as Model
With the onslaught of burger, Mexican and and sandwich retail enterprises, pizzerias are one sector that has yet to be amplified in the fast-casual market. That’s where Pizzeria Locale comes in. The Denver restaurant, that Chipotle helped finance, serves pizzas in the same fashion Chipotle serves burritos: made to-order quickly, individually tailored and with higher quality ingredients than its low-end competitors.
Fast casual restaurants like Chipotle and Panera Bread Co. are stealing market share from casual restaurants like Olive Garden where food takes longer to arrive, and fast food chains like McDonald’s where quality is not in the picture whatsoever.
Ivan Ramen’ Slurp Shop: Japanese-Jewish Fusion
Slurp Shop, Ivan Ramen’s outpost in Gotham West Market, provides a delicate balance of both New York and Japanese culinary influences. The Long Island-born Jewish owner expands on traditional ramen flavors to serve high quality classics with a hint of the Big Apple. Slurp Shop’s Whitefish Donburi epitomizes the union of these two opposing regions. The soon-to-open East Village extension will provide an even greater selection of Jewish-Japanese fusion ramen.
Fung Tu: Per Se Alum’s Chinese-American Restaurant
Fung Tu, a vanguard, casual Chinese-American restaurant, has arrived on 22 Orchard Street on the cusp of the Lower East Side and Chinatown. Experienced restaurateurs are behind the project including Per Se’s Jonathan Wu, Nom Wah Tea Parlor owner Wilson Tang, Mas farmhouse’s John Wells and Nellcôte (in Chicago) vet Jason Wagner. Forward-thinking asian delicacies like silken-fish doufu with dried beef and seaweed, and peanut butter and chocolate ganache sesame balls embody the unconventional (in the best sense) Chinese cuisine.
Food Almanac 2014: Food and Farm Policy
On Wednesday, Feb 12 from 6:30-9:30pm at the Center for Social Innovation, the Food Systems Network NYC will feature a panel discussion about food and farm policy predications as they relate to NYC and the nation. The event will commence with networking and passed hors d’oeuvres followed by the panel, dinner and a Q & A. Wine and local beer will be served. The panelists have not yet been revealed, but check back at Food Systems NYC to find out more.
Fine Dining Chefs Joining the Fast Casual Market
Over the past decade, some of the most experienced chefs, who under typical circumstances would only work in fine dining establishments, have expanded their interests to the fast casual sector. Take Chef Bradford Kent, for example. The CIA grad opened Olio Pizzeria & Cafe in Los Angeles, a wood-fired pizza enterprise; however, the thought of serving high-quality pizza to the fortunate few who could afford it did not appeal to him. This triggered Kent to help launch Blaze Pizza, a fast-casual franchise that serves customizable pizzas in two minutes for less than $8. Blaze Pizza is an example of just one of several chef-driven fast-casual concepts to influence the restaurant industry.
Kent claims, “Every chef wants to make a difference and wants people to eat well. There’s nothing cooler for a chef than seeing tens of thousands of people eating their food and blogging about it. It’s way more exciting than making 30 plates per night. This is more important, and most chefs want to be a part of something like that.”
Darren Tristano of Technomic, the leading food-industry research and consulting firm, offers his theory behind the trend, “The reason chefs are going into fast casual is very simple. Opening full-service restaurants is too risky. Fast casual allows chefs the latitude to create better-quality food in an environment convenient to customers and less risky and costly than an upscale restaurant.”
As for franchising, “But while more chefs are making the leap into fast casual, only a few are dipping their toes into franchising. “I think the reason many of them don’t franchise is because they have the finances to grow their businesses independently,” according to Tristano. “They want to keep control over the quality and service. Those are very important to chefs.”
To learn more, visit the original Entrepreneur article.
RFB: Mobile Food Concession Opportunity (Various Locations)
Last week we posted about the Request for Bids for mobile food concessions specifically in Battery Park. A similar RFB opportunity has become available, this time with various park locations citywide. These locations include several parks in Manhattan, the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens; for the complete list you can refer to Exhibit A of the downloadable RFB. NYC Parks and Recreation is seeking concessionaires for one five-year term, no longer. The due date is Jan 21, 2014 and you may download the new RFB here.
RFB: Mobile Food Concession Opportunity
The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation is issuing a Request for Bids for the sale of food from up to five mobile food concessions at Battery Park. The RFB must be submitted by Tuesday, Jan 21st at 11am, and you may download it here.