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Dig Inn receives $15M investment from Danny Meyer firmDig Inn receives $15M investment from Danny Meyer firm

The fast-casual chain plans growth push, full-service format

Joanna Fantozzi, Senior Editor

April 9, 2019

3 Min Read
dig inn exterior williamsburg investment promo
Dig Inn

New York-based fast-casual chain Dig Inn has received a $15 million investment from Enlightened Hospitality Investments, in which Danny Meyer's Union Square Hospitality Group is a minority general partner.

The firm is the majority investor in a $20 million round of fundraising. As part of the deal, Mark Leavitt, Union Square's chief investment officer, will take a seat on the executive board of 26-unit vegetable forward chain.

USHG CEO Danny Meyer

Photo: Melissa Hom

Danny Meyer

Danny Meyer

“We have talked about the difference between [setting] values and [accruing] value and in Danny’s experience, if you focus on the former, the latter will come,” Dig Inn founder Adam Eskin said. “Union Square Hospitality Group has the incredible capability of scaling a brand […] with what we want to do in terms of culinary training and putting real food in the hands of the people, I think you’d be hard-pressed to find a better partner.”

Dig Inn founder Adam Eskin

Photo: Dig Inn

dig-inn-founder-adam-eskin.jpg

Eskin said he plans to use the funding to further expand the Dig Inn brand with 10 new locations in the New York City and Boston area in 2019, and plans to venture outside of those markets for the first time with an undisclosed number of new locations in 2020.

“Dig Inn is working to bring unprecedented and lasting change to our food system, and we’re proud to partner with them on their journey,” Danny Meyer said in a statement.

Enlightened Hospitality Investments has previously invested in such brands as ice cream brand Salt & Straw, food delivery platform Goldbelly and reservation platform Resy.

Dig Inn’s plans also include a new sit-down restaurant in New York City’s the West Village this fall — the brand’s first venture outside the fast-casual service model. Eskin did not divulge many details about the new restaurant, but he did say that the restaurant would serve as an incubator of culinary creativity. Dig Inn plans to hire 300 new chefs in the near future, many of whom would receive intensive culinary training and essentially learn how to cook at the sit-down Dig Inn store.

Photo: Dig Inn

dig-inn-menu-bowls.jpg

“We don’t want to just crank about a bunch of monochromatic boxes as fast as possible,” Eskin said. “We don’t necessarily want to build this huge restaurant chain, although we believe we can have many more stores.

“But we do want to interrupt the food chain through vegetables, he added. “We can do that in a number of ways: in a fast-casual setting or in sit-down. Sticking just with our current format has its limitations.”

The company also wants to improve upon what they do best: lunchtime delivery. Earlier this year Dig Inn debuted a beta test for its new delivery service, “Room Service,” with a menu that’s specifically designed for delivery: food containers that are designed to keep dishes warm but not overcook them in their own steam, recipes that are designed to “finish cooking” on the way to customers, and innovative ways to keep hot and cold items separate. Room Service will launch in Downtown Manhattan later this year.

Contact Joanna Fantozzi at [email protected]

Follow her on Twitter: @JoannaFantozzi

About the Author

Joanna Fantozzi

Senior Editor

Joanna Fantozzi is a Senior Editor for Nation’s Restaurant News and Restaurant Hospitality. She has more than seven years of experience writing about the restaurant and hospitality industry. Her editorial coverage ranges from profiles of independent restaurants around the country to breaking news and insights into some of the biggest brands in food and beverage, including Starbucks, Domino’s, and Papa John’s.  

Joanna holds a bachelor’s degree in English literature and creative writing from The College of New Jersey and a master’s degree in arts and culture journalism from the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY. Prior to joining Informa’s Restaurants and Food Group in 2018, she was a freelance food, culture, and lifestyle writer, and has previously held editorial positions at Insider (formerly known as Business Insider) and The Daily Meal. Joanna’s work can also be found in The New York Times, Forbes, Vice, The New York Daily News, and Parents Magazine. 

Her areas of expertise include restaurant industry news, restaurant operator solutions and innovations, and political/cultural issues.

Joanna Fantozzi has been a moderator and event facilitator at both Informa’s MUFSO and Restaurants Rise industry events. 

Joanna Fantozzi’s experience:

Senior Editor, Informa Restaurant & Food Group (August 2021-present)

Associate Editor, Informa Restaurant & Food Group (July 2019-August 2021)

Assistant Editor, Informa Restaurant & Food Group (Oct. 2018-July 2019)

Freelance Food & Lifestyle Reporter (Feb. 2018-Oct. 2018)

Food & Lifestyle Reporter, Insider (June 2017-Feb. 2018)

News Editor, The Daily Meal (Jan. 2014- June 2017)

Staff Reporter, Straus News (Jan. 2013-Dec. 2013)

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