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Umami Burger parent accelerating ghost kitchen development due to coronavirus pandemic

SBE Entertainment Group is hiring 1,000 positions to support the rapid growth of its five delivery only brands including Plant Nation, a collaboration with Impossible Foods

Nancy Luna, Senior editor, Nation's Restaurant News

April 15, 2020

3 Min Read
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SBE's five delivery only brands includes Plant Nation, a collaboration with Impossible Foods and Umami Unboxed, shown.SBE

Before the COVID-19 pandemic upended the restaurant industry, New York-based hotel and restaurant operator SBE Entertainment Group began developing chef-driven delivery-only brands to tap into the growing food on-demand segment. 

That strategy is now paying off as the company is accelerating its plans to build 138 ghost kitchens before the end of the year under its C3 division. The new segment, which stands for Creating Culinary Communities, is a culinary platform comprised of food halls, ghost kitchens and mobile delivery.  

With dining room service shut down at restasurants across the U.S., SBE has seen huge demand for its burgeoning off-premise operation. This week, the company has announced plans to hire 1,000 positions to fill a range of jobs needed to expand C3 in New York City, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Miami and San Francisco.

To date, the company has leased 40 “dark” or shuttered Southern California restaurants and is using them as ghost kitchen facilities for its five delivery only brands: Umami Unboxed (the delivery only version of its popular burger brand); Sam's Crispy Chicken (launched March 13); Krispy Rice (launched April 3), Plant Nation (a plant-based concept launching in late April in partnership with Impossible Foods), and EllaMia (a gourmet coffee eatery launching in May).

Related:Independent restaurants upended by coronavirus rethink off-premise business models in a post-pandemic world

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Plant Nation, a delivery-only concept created in partnership with Impossible Foods, is launching in late April.

Other chef collaborations are coming soon including concepts by chefs Dani Garcia, Masaharu Morimoto and Dario Cecchini.

CEO Sam Nazarian said the company will give hiring priority to furloughed SBE employees. There's roughly 500 positions available in the Los Angeles market.

Most of those lost positions, which represents 60% of SBE’s hospitality workforce, were tied to the company’s restaurant and nightlife venues and hotels. Some restaurants like Cleo have closed temporarily, while others like Umami Burger and Katsuya have pivoted to delivery and curbside pickup services.

“Unfortunately COVID hit us all very hard,” Nazarian said in a phone interview with Restaurant Hospitality this week.

In March, C3’s first virtual brand, Sam's Crispy Chicken, debuted just days before mandated dining room closures in California. It will grow from servicing consumers in 12 locations in Southern California to 15 in the next two weeks, Nazarian said.

“The velocity of [growth] is much different than a typical brand rollout,” he said.

Taking advantage of underutilized kitchen space, a key part of C3’s mission, makes it easier to grow quickly. 

The company has signed six leases with CloudKitchens, operated by former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick. Nazarian said he’s also looking at Reef Kitchens based in Miami and Kitchen United, which has locations in Pasadena, Calif. and Chicago. C3 is also looking at malls to open food courts, as well as ghost kitchens.

Related:Tech Tracker: Instagram and ChowNow launch free online ordering for restaurants

“The pipeline is large,” Nazarian said.

One food hall project is planned for Hudson Yards in New York City. The 40,000-square-foot space will have a curated collection of brands, including a 5,000-square foot ghost kitchen space.

It is expected to open in October.

“For us, the food courts are ways in which we can showcase the [delivery only] brands into new communities,” Nazarian said.

Nazarian said he’s giving developers, mall owners and hotels a lifeline by turning dark restaurant kitchens into ghost kitchens. That’s always been part of the company’s strategy, but there will be a greater void if more restaurants close permanently due to the pandemic.

“It's a solution that will generate revenue in a manner that can deal with the demand that we see today during COVID-19 and the demand that we're [going to see] post COVID,” he said.

Contact Nancy Luna at [email protected] 

Follow her on Twitter: @fastfoodmaven

 

About the Author

Nancy Luna

Senior editor, Nation's Restaurant News

Nancy Luna is a senior editor at Nation's Restaurant News and a contributing editor at Supermarket News. She covers the industry's largest and most talked about fast-food brands including McDonald's, Starbucks, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, KFC and Subway. She is an award-winning journalist with more than 25 years reporting experience. As a veteran business reporter based in Southern California, Nancy has covered some of the country's most beloved food and retail brands including In-N-Out, Taco Bell, Trader Joe's, Aldi, Whole Foods Market, Target and Costco. Luna is a graduate of Cal State Fullerton. When she's not digging for news on her beat, you can find Nancy regaling her fans about her latest dining adventures on her Fast Food Maven social media channels. Contact [email protected]  or follow her on Twitter at https://twitter.com/fastfoodmaven

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