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Velvet Taco and its globally inspired menu are revving up growthVelvet Taco and its globally inspired menu are revving up growth

The 38-unit brand plans to grow next through nontraditional units like casinos and airports.

Ron Ruggless, Senior Editor

April 19, 2023

The 38-unit Velvet Taco is taking its international flavors to new venues with the planned expansion into nontraditional locations like casinos and airports, the CEO said.

Dallas-based Velvet Taco has grown into six states since its founding in 2011 by restaurant entrepreneurs Randy DeWitt and Jack Gibbons of FB Society, said Clay Dover, CEO and president of the brand.

Velvet Taco is in major metropolitan areas such as Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Houston and Nashville, Tenn., where the company opened a 2,798-square-foot restaurant in March with a 1,000-square-foot, 60-seat patio.

Dover joined the company in 2017, after private-equity firm L Catterton in 2016 purchased a majority interest in the brand. Velvet Taco sold to private-equity firm Leonard Green & Partners L.P. in November 2021, though L Catterton and founding company FB Society, formerly Front Burner Restaurants, retained “significant minority ownership stakes in the business.”

The company will soon open its first airport unit at Houston Hobby and plans to announce a deal for a casino unit as well, Dover said.

“There's been a lot of evolution within the brand,” he said. “I think the one thing that we try to do is stay true to the original idea of what made Velvet Taco successful. …  As we grow the brand, I think that's always something that is critical to me and to the team: How do we maintain that brand specialness, that uniqueness that people will still remember but yet still be able to scale?”

Dover said that during and since the pandemic, Velvet Taco has updated technology, added a pickup line, created a mobile app, rolled out to-go ordering and catering and expanded the beverage offerings, which are offered to-go where allowed.

“Those are several things that we've done in order to broaden the horizons for the brand,” he said, “but it still comes down to unique amazing tacos at every single restaurant.”

Chicken Tikka, an Indian-flavored taco with basmati rice and an in-house tikka sauce, remains the No. 1 seller, Dover said.

Before the pandemic, Velvet Taco had tested a new kitchen display system, revamped its packaging and gotten third-party vendors.

“I think the to-go experience has stuck around,” Dover said. “Prior to the pandemic we're about 37% take-out business — our average unit volumes are $4.2 million for our mature restaurants — so it's a healthy amount of business going outside of the restaurant.” That has settled to about 50% of sales, he said.

“It's been that way for the last 18 months or so,” he added. “I think it's going to stay. I think that's one of those lingering effects.”

That has required new thinking, he said. “We actually have a process where we say, ‘How will this stand? How long will it stay hot or warm? What's the drive time? How long can it sit out? Will it degrade?’ ... You have to think through those things. So that's one of the lingering impacts from COVID.”

Velvet Taco will enter South Florida later this year, Dover said, with Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood among the first locations. Stores are often open until 4 a.m., which is another distinguishing element.

“We've got a global-inspired brand,” Dover added, citing such items as Korean fried rice tacos and fish and chips tacos.

“We've got a different approach to tacos,” he said. “We are not Tex-Mex. … The new flavors that we have from all over the globe. It’s a huge thing that sets us apart.”

Contact Ron Ruggless at [email protected]

Follow him on Twitter: @RonRuggless

About the Author

Ron Ruggless

Senior Editor, Nation’s Restaurant News / Restaurant Hospitality

Ron Ruggless serves as a senior editor for Informa Connect’s Nation’s Restaurant News (NRN.com) and Restaurant Hospitality (Restaurant-Hospitality.com) online and print platforms. He joined NRN in 1992 after working 10 years in various roles at the Dallas Times Herald newspaper, including restaurant critic, assistant business editor, food editor and lifestyle editor. He also edited several printings of the Zagat Dining Guide for Dallas-Fort Worth, and his articles and photographs have appeared in Food & Wine, Food Network and Self magazines. 

Ron Ruggless’ areas of expertise include foodservice mergers, acquisitions, operations, supply chain, research and development and marketing. 

Ron Ruggless is a frequent moderator and panelist at industry events ranging from the Multi-Unit Foodservice Operators (MUFSO) conference to RestaurantSpaces, the Council of Hospitality and Restaurant Trainers, the National Restaurant Association’s Marketing Executives Group, local restaurant associations and the Horeca Professional Expo in Madrid, Spain.

Ron Ruggless’ experience:

Regional and Senior Editor, Informa Connect’s Nation’s Restaurant News and Restaurant Hospitality (1992 to present)

Features Editor – Dallas Times Herald (1989-1991)

Restaurant Critic and Food Editor – Dallas Times Herald (1987-1988)

Editing Roles – Dallas Times Herald (1982-1987)

Editing Roles – Charlotte (N.C.) Observer (1980-1982)

Editing Roles – Omaha (Neb.) World-Herald (1978-1980)

Email: [email protected]

Social media:

Twitter@RonRuggless

LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/ronruggless

Instagram: @RonRuggless

TikTok: @RonRuggless

 

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