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Celeb chef's new recipe for success: Healthy fast casual Kimberley Bainbridge April 10, 2015 CNBC.com The number of fast-casual restaurants has skyrocketed since 2009—it's the only niche in the restaurant sector that's shown any growth—and that has led to some big public offerings, from Chipotle to Shake Shack. But critics contend that today's fast-casual boom still lacks one key ingredient: health. Franklin Becker, fine-dining veteran and celebrity chef, is aiming to change that. Becker has added fast-casual chain entrepreneur to his résumé and has teamed up with a New York City fast-food power broker Aurify Brands (Five Guys, Dunkin' Donuts and Melt Shop). Together, they plan to make The Little Beet the next fast-casual boom recipe, focused not just on better ingredients but overall better human health. Source: Little Beet The Little Beet, a fast-casual restaurant in New York City "America is in the beginning phases of a revolution," said Becker. "No longer are we looking for mass-produced foods. We are looking towards a healthier lifestyle. In our schools, in our workplaces and at home, everyone is more aware of what they eat." A recent New York Times analysis of Chipotle's menu revealed sodium levels that would make undergrads surviving on ramen noodles and Kraft mac seem to be leading as healthy a lifestyle as barbacoa burrito salad fans. The average meal at Chipotle has more than 1,000 calories, "a full day's worth of salt and 75 percent of a full day's worth of saturated fat," the Times reported. Burgers and fries and caramel shakes speak for their own nutritional content. What both Chipotle and Shack Shake show is that using good ingredients isn't necessarily a recipe for a healthy lifestyle as much as partially healthy indulgence. Now in his mid-forties, Becker is a regular guest on BRAVO's "Top Chef," The Food Network's "Iron Chef," and various popular morning shows like "TODAY" and "CBS This Morning." As corporate chef for EMM—a premier restaurant management company that hosts events attended by celebs from Jay-Z to John Travolta—Becker developed award-winning menu items for upscale eateries like Abe & Arthur's, CATCH and Lexington Brass. He was executive chef for fine-dining haunts like Capitale, Brasserie and Trinity at the Tribeca Grand. He received accolades from the notoriously stringent New Yorker food critic Gael Greene, honorable mentions from John Mariani (formerly of Esquire) and others. Backed by Aurify Brands, Becker's new venture, The Little Beet, is a complete departure from the restaurant investment group's traditional calorie-dense portfolio staples. Though The Little Beet falls into the fast-casual category, it attempts to differentiate itself from other fast-casual restaurants by offering consumers "Guiltin' Free" products with their largely gluten-free menu items. "It's the first concept that we've developed that is actually healthy," said Aurify CEO John Rigos. "Five Guys we franchised. Melt Shop [in Manhattan] is artisanal, with great-quality, great-tasting ingredients. But at The Little Beet, we actually use the vegetables. You can actually taste the broccoli, cauliflower, string beans. Most times you can't, because they're smothered in sauce." A plan to "beet" the competition The Little Beet uses locally sourced ingredients whenever possible. Where a simple chicken burrito sans sauce, cheese, guacamole and sour cream comes in at 790 calories, and a single ShackBurger without cheese or fries weighs in at 490 calories, a Little Beet chicken plate with a side of sweet potatoes is only 470 calories. In fewer than 18 months, The Little Beet has expanded from one flagship store in Manhattan to include another location in the affluent suburb of Garden City, Long Island. As executive chef, Becker has also helped develop The Little Beet brand into a full-service dine-in restaurant called The Little Beet Table. The Little Beet currently serves about 1,500 people daily and plans to open seven new locations in the near future, with one opening on West 51st and Park Avenue by summer 2015, then expand into Washington, D.C. Becker is moving more aggressively to expand than some of the blockbuster fast-casual chains. Chipotle waited two years to open its second and third location, and it was three years before Chipotle opened a fourth location, according to its corporate website. The Little Beet's business plan is riding the coattails of the fast-casual juggernaut, which partially explains why Becker is moving swiftly to expand. NPD Group Restaurant analyst Bonnie Riggs said the restaurant industry was hit hard by the recession in 2009, and the fast-casual sector is the only niche to have had strong growth year after year. It reached $23.3 billion, as of February, up 10 percent over the year-ago period. Visits to fast casual restaurants increased by 7 percent compared to a year ago, according to The NPD Group/CREST research unit. "People like the idea of fresh, quality taste and know it's not necessarily the cheapest, but they see it as a value," she said. "Cosi closed a few units recently," the analyst said. "Baja Grill had some challenges. For some stores, traffic is down. But fast casual is giving consumers what they want for right now," Riggs added. Source: Little Beet Franklin Becker, founder and executive chef, The Little Beet