Salad and Go
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Restaurants |
Genre | Fast food |
Founded | 2013Gilbert, Arizona | in
Headquarters | Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., |
Number of locations | 113 (2023) |
Area served | Arizona, Texas, Nevada, Oklahoma |
Key people | Charlie Morrison (CEO) |
Products | Salads, Wraps, soups, Breakfast burritos, lemonades, Cold brew |
Website | saladandgo |
Salad and Go is an American drive-thru restaurant chain that specializes in salads, wraps, and breakfast. The brand is headquartered in Tempe, Arizona, with a second office in Addison, Texas, and two food production facilities in Phoenix and Dallas. Salad and Go is a privately held company with more than 100 locations operating across four states, including Arizona, Texas, Oklahoma and Nevada.
The brand features a variety of fresh items such as salads, wraps, soups, breakfast burritos and bowls, cold brew coffee and hand-crafted lemonades.
History
[edit]Salad and Go was founded in 2013 in Gilbert, Arizona. The co-founders asked Chef Daniel Patino to help them develop the concept.[1] Chef Patino remains an executive chef for the brand.
In March 2022, industry veteran Charlie Morrison joined Salad and Go as Chief Executive Officer (CEO).[2] Since Morrison joined, the brand has expanded rapidly into major markets including the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex (DFW),[3] Houston,[4] Las Vegas[5] and Oklahoma City[6] while continuing to open locations in its home state of Arizona. Salad and Go is on track to have a total of 135 stores open by the end of 2023. In January 2024, CEO Charlie Morrison said it was on pace to continue to open up a restaurant a week and described his plans for thousands of locations.[7]
Operations
[edit]Salad and Go vertically integrates operations and distribution, sourcing ingredients directly from local farmers and suppliers whenever possible. The chain operates two food production facilities–one in Arizona and one in Texas–which prepare produce directly from farms and deliver it to stores. The salad chain has plans to build a new food production facility in North Texas by 2025. The average Salad and Go store size is approximately 750 square feet.[8] This smaller model allows the stores to be built quickly in targeted areas while minimizing costs. Restaurants lack certain features of typical fast-food establishments like freezers, boilers, or fryers that require inspection before opening.[9]
Every Salad and Go store has a drive-thru lane and a pickup window for orders placed in the drive-thru, online or through the Salad and Go mobile app.
Menu
[edit]Salad and Go uses fresh natural ingredients. The menu currently offers eight salads with house-made dressings and a choice of proteins (chicken, steak and tofu).[10] Every salad is available as a wrap. The menu also features soup and five breakfast burrito options, also available to order as bowls.
Locations
[edit]Salad and Go currently has more than 100 stores operating across four states: Arizona, Texas, Oklahoma and Nevada.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Meet Chef Patino". Salad and Go. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- ^ Coley, Ben (16 August 2022). "Former Wingstop CEO Looks to Turn Salad and Go into Category Leader". QSR Magazine. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- ^ "Salad and Go Announces Three Stores for Dallas-Fort Worth market". QSR Magazine. 11 October 2022. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- ^ Feser, Katherine (26 January 2023). "Salad and Go drive-thru chain rolls into Houston suburbs in Texas expansion". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- ^ Lilly, Caitlin (12 January 2023). "Drive-thru salad eatery opening first location in Las Vegas". FOX 5 Vegas. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- ^ Query-Thompson, Kimberly (10 November 2022). "Two 'Salad and Go' restaurants to open in Oklahoma City". KFOR. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- ^ "Salad and Go is opening a store a week with plans to expand 'into the thousands'". Nation's Restaurant News. 2024-01-11. Retrieved 2024-01-17.
- ^ Ruggless, Ron (19 January 2023). "Salad and Go enters Nevada market amid fast growth pace". Nation's Restaurant News. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- ^ Lucas, Amelia (2024-01-19). "Sweetgreen wants to be the 'McDonald's of its generation.' This rival salad chain could beat it". CNBC. Retrieved 2024-01-19.
- ^ "Menu". Salad and Go. Retrieved 15 March 2023.