Smart way to cater to Singaporean food palates

FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 2016
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TECHNOLOGY is a secret weapon that new food entrepreneurs are banking on to change the way Singaporeans eat.

There is a new breed of food entrepreneurs looking to conquer Singaporean palates.
They have little to no restaurant expertise and no cooking skills,|but they want nothing less |than to change the way we eat |every day. Their secret weapon Technology.
Take Grain, a food tech firm started in 2014 that cooks nutritious lunches that customers can order online on weekdays and have delivered to their offices.
It also recently started an events catering business and has applied for a halal certificate.
The start-up was founded by a group of friends with no background in the food industry but a lot of experience in using technology and customer insights to make businesses better.
The company raised US$1.82 million within a month from |venture capitalist firms in a round of funding last year. In just two years, the firm has grown from |an initial team of 10 to 60 today and recently moved to a new office and kitchen space almost 10 times |the size of its previous premises to cope with growing demand.
“They saw something in this team which they don't see a lot of in other food companies, which is that the majority of this team have no food experience,” said Grain's head of partnerships, Terence Yeo.
“This team is comprised of tech people and ex-consultants. The way we think about the business is very different. “
Indeed, Grain runs its food business in a way that would seem radical, even crazy, in a traditional restaurant. The chefs' bonuses are tied to the daily ratings that customers give their food, a system that also applies to the delivery staff. What gets put on the menu has much less to do with the chefs' specialities than with what customers “ noted co-founder Yong Yi Sung.
“The menu encompasses general buckets of preferences and it's a one-stop offering. Nine out of 10 people who land on this page will find something they would want to eat, even as the menu changes”.
This week's offerings include assam beef rendang, soya honey glazed salmon and hickory smoked chicken among other dishes, priced between $8.15 (Bt xxxxxx) and $12.28.
While the chefs are encouraged to flex their creative muscles, meals that receive low feedback are axed from the menu. Grain's chefs, who used to cook at eateries such as Mugaritz in Spain - considered one of the world's top 10 restaurants - and Singapore's Prive, have had a lot of adapting to do.
“Initially they were quite defensive - chefs have a lot of pride in their work. But over time we broke down this barrier and they saw that what they think is tasty might not always have mass appeal,” said co-founder Gao Rifeng.
The aim, he said, is to become Singapore's biggest restaurant within the next two years.
Darwin Gosal, founder of CryoWerx, has invented a smart vending machine that he believes could change how food is bought and sold in offices and residential neighbourhoods.
The vending machine looks very much like the kind of fridge you would see in a convenience store.
However, it stays locked until a customer downloads the CryoWerx app and uses it to scan a QR code on the vending machine. This unlocks the machine, and the customer can then take out whatever items he wants from it.
Food suppliers benefit because they get a new platform for selling their wares to the public without having to open up new branches or hire more manpower, he noted.
For now, Gosal is targeting companies as his main customer base, selling the machine as a healthy addition to the corporate pantry. “Some companies give out FitBit devices to staff to encourage them to lead healthy lifestyles. They could have a similar programme using this machine by subsidising the cost of the healthy food items in it,” he said.
CryoWerx is one of several companies here that are introducing Singapore to a new, high-tech breed of vending machines that look set to take over neighbourhood coffee shops.
Just last weekend, a vending machine “cafe” serving hot meals, sandwiches, snacks and drinks round the clock was launched in Sengkang. The latest breed of vending machines can slow-cook food, serve freshly prepared restaurant dishes and even dispense fusion popiah.
This all sounds impressive as it is, but Vishal Harnal, a partner at Silicon Valley-based venture capital firm 500 Startups, said there is a lot more potential to be tapped in the local and regional food market.
In fact, he believes food tech in Southeast Asia is only getting started. The big opportunities he sees are in home-grown small food brands as well as in technology- enabled innovative foods, such as alternative sources of protein.