Current:Home > MyRestaurant chain Sweetgreen using robots to make salads -Horizon Finance School
Restaurant chain Sweetgreen using robots to make salads
View
Date:2025-04-17 11:57:14
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! (2)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Mega Millions jackpot approaching $900 million: What to know about the next lottery drawing
- 'American Idol': Past contestant Alyssa Raghu hijacks best friend's audition to snag a golden ticket
- ‘Access Hollywood’ tape won’t be played at Donald Trump’s hush-money criminal trial, judge rules
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- D.C.'s cherry blossoms just hit their earliest peak bloom in 20 years. Here's why scientists say it'll keep happening earlier.
- Car crashes into a West Portal bus stop in San Francisco leaving 3 dead, infant injured
- $510 Dodgers jerseys and $150 caps. Behold the price of being an Ohtani fan in Japan
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- New Hampshire charges 1st person in state with murder in the death of a fetus
Ranking
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Trump’s lawyers say it is impossible for him to post bond covering $454 million civil fraud judgment
- Abandoned slate mine in Wales now world's deepest hotel
- Shop Customer-Approved Big Hair Products for Thin Hair and Fine Hair
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Virginia university professor found dead after being reported missing at Florida conference
- Ariana Grande and Dalton Gomez are officially divorced
- Virginia university professor found dead after being reported missing at Florida conference
Recommendation
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
The April 8 solar eclipse could impact power. Here's why.
March Madness snubs: Oklahoma, Indiana State and Big East teams lead NCAA Tournament victims
Pro-Trump Michigan attorney arrested after hearing in DC over leaking Dominion documents
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Stock market today: Asian shares are mixed after Bank of Japan ups key rate for 1st time in 17 years
Haiti's long history of crises, and its present unrest
It's 2024 and I'm sick of silly TV shows about politics.