Current:Home > NewsRestaurant chain Sweetgreen using robots to make salads -Profound Wealth Insights
Restaurant chain Sweetgreen using robots to make salads
View
Date:2025-04-13 14:41:44
It turns out robots can make decent chefs.
Just ask salad chain Sweetgreen, which is testing automating some food preparation in order to speed up customer wait times and cut labor costs.
At a Sweetgreen "Infinite Kitchen" restaurant in Naperville, Illinois, a proprietary robot, not human salad makers, is handling the bulk of the work.
"You just walk in, there's a digital tablet, you place your order and it goes right to this robot, which is front and center in the restaurant and it has these tubes where the ingredients are," Wall Street Journal reporter Heather Haddon told CBS News.
Sweetgreen began piloting the tech in May, after acquiring robotic kitchen startup Spyce, to speed up operations.
"We believe that automation will enable us to elevate the quality and integrity of our food while also providing a faster and more convenient experience for our customers and a better, more dynamic job for our team members," Sweetgreen CEO and co-founder Jonathan Neman said in a statement at the time.
Other fast food and fast casual restaurant chains are experimenting with automation, too. Chipotle and White Castle have tested similar systems.
At Sweetgreen, the robot shoots greens such as kale into a salad bowl, which moves on a conveyor belt as other components are added and the salad is dressed and shaken.
"Then a person just puts on the final ingredients and it's put on a little shelf and you pick it up and that's it," Haddon said. "And I have to say it was fast. I think it was probably much faster than the Sweetgreen you might see in Midtown Manhattan."
The tech is also helping Sweetgreen make salads faster and more cheaply.
"When they're at peak time, when they're really slammed, when you're waiting in that line trying to get that salad at Sweetgreen, this can speed it up. And it will save on labor," Haddon said. "The Sweetgreen out in Naperville said it was using much less labor to actually assemble the salads."
Sweetgreen said it plans to integrate the "Infinite Kitchen" technology into new restaurants it opens. "They're really orienting their company around it," Haddon said.
- In:
- Robot
veryGood! (984)
Related
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Beyoncé drops 27-song track list for new album Cowboy Carter
- Late Football Star Spencer Webb's Son Spider Celebrates His First Birthday
- Alabama's Nate Oats called coaching luminaries in search of advice for struggling team
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Scientists working on AI tech to match dogs up with the perfect owners
- NASCAR at Richmond spring 2024: Start time, TV, streaming, lineup for Toyota Owners 400
- Lizzo speaks out against 'lies being told about me': 'I didn't sign up for this'
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Traffic moving again on California’s scenic Highway 1 after lane collapsed during drenching storm
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Former US Rep. William Delahunt of Massachusetts has died at age 82
- Gunmen in Ecuador kill 9, injure 10 others in attack in coastal city of Guayaquil as violence surges
- Inside Paris Hilton, Victoria Beckham and More Stars' Easter 2024 Celebrations
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- N.C. State and its 2 DJs headed to 1st Final Four since 1983 after 76-64 win over Duke
- Women’s March Madness highlights: South Carolina, NC State heading to Final Four
- Robert Randolph talks performing on new Beyoncé album, Cowboy Carter
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Robert Randolph talks performing on new Beyoncé album, Cowboy Carter
Oxford-Cambridge boat racers warned of alarmingly high E. coli levels in London's sewage-infused Thames
Chance Perdomo, 'Gen V' and 'Sabrina' star, dies at 27: 'An incredibly talented performer'
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
Latino communities 'rebuilt' Baltimore. Now they're grieving bridge collapse victims
The Bachelor’s Joey and Kelsey Reveal They’ve Nailed Down One Crucial Wedding Detail
These extreme Easter egg hunts include drones, helicopters and falling eggs