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Grocery chains are stocking their shelves with food from high-end restaurants, turning popular menu items into profitable products as consumers seek high-quality, home-cooked meals.
During the pandemic, restaurants have had to think creatively to survive. Some establishments have decided to transform their offerings into products that consumers at home can make themselves.
Joan Driggs, IRI’s vice president of thought leadership, told Food Dive that gourmet entrees and premium sauces have allowed the restaurant to enter retail and provided a new outlet at a time when many of its competitors were going out of business.
“It may not be the same experience, but it brings new life to the experience outside the home,” Driggs said.
Nearly five years later, the restaurant-to-retail transition shows no signs of slowing down. There are several fine restaurants such as Carbone. Momofuku is By giving you more space in your store, you can generate millions of dollars in additional revenue and expand your customer base in the process.
Marguerite Mariscal, CEO of Momofuku in New York, said she saw an opportunity for the company to diversify by selling air-dried ramen, sauces and seasoned salts in grocery stores.
It launched its first product in 2020 to capitalize on the surge in home cooking during COVID-19, then expanded to larger stores like Target and Whole Foods two years later. The company is currently prioritizing both restaurants and retail stores, with plans to open 10,000 stores by the end of the year.
Mariscal said locating in CPG stores is a way to “future-proof” the business, which previously competed only in the highly competitive restaurant industry.
“Grocery stores have been a product that has been around for the last 20 years, and we thought the biggest opportunity was in the most untouched areas,” Mariscal said.
She added that the pandemic has provided a big boost to the store’s Global Flavors section. This created a retail opportunity for Momofuku, but not everyone took to it.
“We talked to the Pepsi people, the Campbell’s people. They all told us to go somewhere else. The grocery store aisles were the sleepiest places,” Mariscal said. “But we heard it and saw an opportunity.”
Momofuku We used consumer data collected over 20 years to develop retail products such as Sweet & Spicy Noodles and Black Truffle Chili Crunch. It also capitalized on the popularity of founder David Chang, who rose to prominence with the Netflix series ‘Dinner Time Live’ and boasts 1.8 million followers on Instagram.
The company found that 80% of the people who follow Momofuku and Chang on social media do not live in the city where the restaurant operates. Launching in retail stores allowed the company to connect with people and generate sales it wouldn’t have otherwise.
Mariscal said Momofuku had a difficult time reformulating the restaurant’s flavors to make them shelf-stable. For example, the company hasn’t figured out how to get its popular ginger chives to maintain its popularity profile. Other innovations were abandoned because Momofuku could not find the ideal taste or price point.
“It’s a real balance to navigate that and make sure we’re both creating a premium product, but not an inaccessible product,” she said.
Increased items in high-end restaurants Food sold in stores is associated with rising market share for premium foods as many consumers seek more luxurious experiences at home.
Jeff Turnas, senior vice president of culinary at Whole Foods. he told Food Dive earlier this year. Shoppers are still buying products they believe are of better quality, like sauces and breads, despite the price tag.
IRI’s Driggs said restaurant brands are poised to benefit as demand for premium products continues to grow even as cash-strapped consumers cut back on spending. Circana executives said that to be successful in stores, restaurants must ensure optimal positioning on shelves and online while leveraging their social media presence.

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Provided by Carbone Fine Food
Pursuing Carbone’s Pasta Sauce
Two New York City-based restaurants, Carbone and Rao’s, have successfully entered the grocery market with their premium tomato sauces. At some point, both establishments hired food industry veteran Eric Skae as CEO of their retail division..
Rao’s – that’s The keystone of The Campbell’s Company’s recent $2.7 billion acquisition. of parent company Sovos Brands — introduced the sauce to retail stores in 1992. Rao’s later expanded into soups, pasta, pizza and lasagna. Rao’s has annual sales of less than $1 billion and is growing in double digits. that Last year, half of all U.S. households purchased the product.
Carbone Fine Foods launched its sauces in 2021, creating popular products with premium ingredients and higher prices than most competitors.
Skae, who joined Carbone Fine Foods ahead of its launch, told Food Dive that the goal was to bottle the restaurant’s recipes. This gives CPG brands the ability to chart a course for those who understand what makes a restaurant’s formula work best.
Restaurant founder Mario Carbone and his business partner Rich Torrisi were heavily involved in developing the retail product.
“They were both very active in the process, leaving Manhattan at 3 a.m. and being at our production facility in central Pennsylvania at 6 a.m.,” Skae said.
Carbon recorded 80% sales growth compared to the previous year early this year and expanded its lineup to include Alfredo sauce and pizza sauce.
Skae said Carbone Fine Foods is pursuing additional innovation in the sauce category. But like Momofuku, he said the company is still working to get certain flavors from the menu to the shelves without sacrificing quality. Skae points to pesto, which can taste “amazing” in a home kitchen but is difficult to scale up.
“You know, have you noticed that the pesto on the shelf is getting really brown? “The leaves oxidize immediately, and leaves that are not brown contain components that cannot be considered food.” Ske said. “Pesto is not a huge category, but it’s a category that fits our brand.”
Skae believes the success of Rao’s and Carbone stems from understanding that consumers will pay more for high-quality pasta sauces.
“There is a big shift from value and mid-range categories to premium categories,” he said. “If you look at other categories, you’ll see similar dynamics: Where are the opportunities and where are the gaps?”









