Fast Company

SALAD DAYS

The founders of the fast-casual chain Sweetgreen are building a farm-to-counter empire, one bowl at a time.
Heads of the class From left: Nathaniel Ru, Nicolas Jammet, and Jonathan Neman launched Sweetgreen just a few months after graduating from college in 2007.

McDonald’s founder Ray Kroc once said of his restaurants, “We’re not in the hamburger business, we’re in show business.” That is perhaps the one thing he and the millennial founders of the fast-growing locavore salad chain Sweetgreen might agree on.

If you’ve never visited a Sweetgreen, picture a farm stand designed by Steve Jobs—with white walls and colorful, fresh vegetables waiting to be chopped. The stores’ open kitchens (a design trope shared by Chipotle, another fast-casual pioneer) showcase how much scratch cooking happens on-site. Salad dressings are made in-house daily. So is the falafel, which is prepared from dry chickpeas soaked overnight on the premises. (This is basically unheard of in this category; even some high-end restaurants use canned chickpeas.) The nine-year-old company also stages the Sweetlife food and music festival in Columbia, Maryland, each spring, with acts such as the Strokes and Solange. After

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Fast Company

Fast Company1 min read
10 kinetx
IN SEPTEMBER 2023, NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft dropped off the first samples from an asteroid collected by the U.S. The half-pound capsule that parachuted to the ground in Utah was the payoff of the craft's miraculous journey on which it landed on a
Fast Company2 min read
49 campus
WITH STUDENT LOAN DEBT BALlooning into a $1.8 trillion crisis, education entrepreneur Tade Oyerinde has developed an affordable alternative to a traditional four-year degree. In 2022, he launched Campus, the first national online community college. W
Fast Company1 min read
46 uncommon
WHEN ELECTRONIC ARTS NEEDED TO REBR AND ITS $2 BILLION soccer vedio game FIFA after a financial dispute with the global sport's governing body, it tapped the London-based agency Uncommon for the job—perhaps the most daunting marketing challenge of la

Related Books & Audiobooks