Two of the chain's former execs look to grow a local barbecue chain and start a chain of authentic taquerias, looking to be the ‘Lettuce Entertain You of fast-casual restaurants.'
jnm123 wrote:I always thought Naf Naf OK, a step better than Roti Med Grill but not remotely close to Pita Inn, the gold standard in my book. They haven't lost the ethnicity as of yet. But they only have, what, 4 stores?
jnm123 wrote:I always thought Naf Naf OK, a step better than Roti Med Grill but not remotely close to Pita Inn, the gold standard in my book. They haven't lost the ethnicity as of yet. But they only have, what, 4 stores?
jnm123 wrote:So that's what the niche is called now...fast/casual?
Binko wrote:jnm123 wrote:So that's what the niche is called now...fast/casual?
I don't know about "now," but fast-casual has been a term for at least a decade now. I think places like Chipotle and Panera popularized the concept the most.
spinynorman99 wrote:Binko wrote:jnm123 wrote:So that's what the niche is called now...fast/casual?
I don't know about "now," but fast-casual has been a term for at least a decade now. I think places like Chipotle and Panera popularized the concept the most.
It has its own industry niche: https://www.fastcasual.com/
Octarine wrote:I ate twice at Roti, flavorless and limp is the best I can say.
Added peeve, if the name of your restaurant is a a food item, it should be mandatory to sell that food item. They do not sell roti at Roti.
ronnie_suburban wrote:What about Panda Express?
=R=
teatpuller wrote:I detest these mediocre Middle Eastern concepts. bleech.
teatpuller wrote:I detest these mediocre Middle Eastern concepts. bleech.
sdrucker wrote:teatpuller wrote:I detest these mediocre Middle Eastern concepts. bleech.
Even more so when the food is a pale imitation of the real thing you'd eat in the Middle East. Without relatively fresh pita and hummus that has tahini flavor, or the plentiful condiments (peppers, onions, eggplants, tomato etc.) you might as well be eating gyros.
Geo wrote: I just wandered through a discussion on the New York Times food page regarding an instant ramen recipe that used butter and slices of American cheese. Many people were horrified and refused to even consider making it because it so violated their ramen principles.
JoelF wrote:Now, if I were to try to create an ethnic fast-casual concept, I think I'd go for Indo-Pak: something kabob-ish (tandoori, tikka) on a naan wrap, chutneys, salad and curd (yogurt).
Naf Naf Grill has signed its first franchisee via a 10-unit area development deal with Indianapolis based early-stage investment company, 316 Investments, through its affiliate Fan the Flame Llc. Locations will open across central Indiana in Indianapolis, Bloomington, Lafayette, Fort Wayne and beyond, according to a company press release.
Dave148 wrote:Naf Naf Grill has signed its first franchisee via a 10-unit area development deal with Indianapolis based early-stage investment company, 316 Investments, through its affiliate Fan the Flame Llc. Locations will open across central Indiana in Indianapolis, Bloomington, Lafayette, Fort Wayne and beyond, according to a company press release.
https://www.fastcasual.com/news/naf-naf ... hise-deal/
Operating as Venture Kitchen, Sloan and Wiener last month took a minority stake and managing partner position in Blackwood BBQ, a three-unit Chicago-based purveyor of 15-hour-smoked beef brisket, chicken and pulled pork. And they soon plan to open Tijuana taco-and-cemita restaurant Invicto in Naperville, the first of what they hope will be dozens of follow-ons.