Emerging Brands

Automated restaurants, Chipotle's next thing and a plant-based burger with Kevin Hart buzz

Here are a few concepts to watch in 2024 and beyond. Some have only barely gotten started but they promise big things.
Hart House
Hart House uses a proprietary plant-based burger. | Photo by Lisa Jennings.

Even with the pandemic now a distant memory, restaurant entrepreneurs continued to tinker with the economic model, looking for new ways to boost margins.

In 2023, operators moved away from ideas like ghost kitchens and virtual brands. This year, they embraced notions of vertical integration, the use of commissary kitchens and anything that allowed them to operate restaurants with fewer humans.

And there are a few particularly interesting concepts to watch, including some that have barely gotten started but show promise. Here are some projects to keep an eye on in 2024:

Kernel

It isn’t expected to open until January, but the new concept being developed by former Chipotle founder Steve Ells already has the industry’s attention.

Dubbed Kernel, the fast-casual concept is coming to New York City where it will serve up a plant-based menu. The restaurant is designed to be fully automated, supported by as few as three humans, in a space about 800-square feet. The outlets will be served by a central kitchen in a hub-and-spoke model.

Ells has raised at least $36 million in Series A funding and he plans to open 15 locations in New York in the next two years, and then more elsewhere. If it works, Ells has also talked about licensing the technology to other restaurant concepts.

Hart House photo courtesy of the brand

Hart House

This past year saw the tires deflate on a number of plant-based burger chains, but one appears to have potential: Hart House. Actor and comedian Kevin Hart launched the concept in 2022, and the chain has opened four locations in the Los Angeles area.

Maybe the hysteria over vegan burgers is done, but Hart House has the brains to build the brand without anti-meat hype. Leading it as CEO is the former &Pizza president Andy Hooper, and the menu was developed by former Burger King head of culinary Mike Salem. And, of course, there’s the Hollywood-grade marketing team equipped to mine Hart’s deep A-list connections.

Pepper Lunch

Pepper Lunch allows guests to cook their own combination on an extremely hot cast-iron plate. Dangerous but tasty. | Photo by Lisa Jennings.

Pepper Lunch

This Japanese-born concept is a 500-unit chain in 15 countries, but there are only five in the U.S., mostly around Los Angeles. Earlier this year, however, Pepper Lunch franchising launched in North America and Troy Hooper was named co-CEO of parent Hot Palette Holdings to help grow the brand.

A sort of “DIY teppanyaki,” the fast-casual Pepper Lunch is known for its customizable rice bowls served on a sizzling cast-iron dish that cooks the thinly sliced proteins as it comes to the table. It’s quick, affordable and offers a fun interactive experience with authentic flavors. The company is working on technology that will adapt the dishes for takeout and delivery.

Farmesa

Chipotle tested Farmesa out of a Kitchen United outlet but then moved the test to its Cultivate Center. | Photo by Lisa Jennings

Farmesa

Watch this one particularly closely because it’s still a bit of a mystery. Chipotle in 2023 tested a new concept called Farmesa Fresh Eatery, a healthful brand with a menu created by Nate Appleman, who also developed the short-lived Shophouse Southeast Asian Kitchen brand for Chipotle.

Farmesa was tested as a digital, mostly delivery concept out of a Kitchen United location in Santa Monica, Calif.  In October, the outlet closed but the company said it was moving ahead with the test by moving it into the company’s Cultivate Center, with the goal of refining the brand to open as a standalone restaurant. Time will tell whether that actually happens, but for Chipotle fans looking for something new from the brand, this could be it.

Chubby Cattle

Restaurateur David Zhao is only 29 years old but he has a growing multi-brand restaurant empire and American Wagyu cattle ranch that is promising great things. Zhao’s Chubby Cattle International has 14 restaurants and another 25 slated for 2024. Concepts include the full-service brands like Niku X and The X Pot Wagyu House, but also multiple locations of the hot pot concept Chubby Cattle and derivations like Chubby Curry and Chubby (boba) Tea. Wagyu appears across the group’s menus, in part because the company includes a Wagyu cattle ranch in California and Oregon to control meat production. And there’s a Chubby Club loyalty program that crosses all concepts, as well as related CPG products in retail stores.

Eatertainment

This is not one concept but a segment that is re-emerging, after the pandemic era threatened to bring an end to such concepts. Now they're coming back fast and furious to give experience-hungry consumers an opportunity to get out and play. Concepts like Bowlero and Top Golf are leading the way for eatertainment venues ranging from pickleball and ping pong to surfing and even curling. Expect to see more of these offering new and innovative ways to gather for food, drink and fun.

This story is part of Restaurant Business' look back at 2023. Click here to read other year-end coverage.

 

 

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

Why population trends may help, and hurt, restaurants

The Bottom Line: Darden CEO Rick Cardenas told investors this week that demographic trends are shifting in restaurants’ favor. But some demographic trends will be a headwind.

Financing

TGI Friday's closures continue the bar & grill sector's long decline

The Bottom Line: The chain has been struggling in the U.S. for years as domestic consumers shift spending away from traditional bar & grill chains.

Financing

How many Boston Market locations are left? That's a good question

The fast-casual chain appears to have closed at least one-third of its restaurants in 2023, and likely many more as years of decline become a freefall. But how many it has remains a mystery.

Trending

More from our partners