I tried the San Francisco restaurant that serves quinoa delivered via robot cubbies and it's totally awesome
A new restaurant just opened in San Francisco on Monday, but it's not your typical fast-food joint.
Eatsa, located at 121 Spear Street, has a menu that revolves around the grain quinoa ("keen-wah") and eliminates employees and time spent waiting in lines by taking orders through tablets and serving food from robotic cubbies.
The goal of the resturant is two-fold: Create a lightening-fast food experience on-the-cheap by automating the service process as much as possible - workers' salaries make up about 30% of the restaurant industry's costs - and to promote a healthy food that's efficient to produce. Eatsa says that substituting quinoa for meat as a protein is better for the planet because it requires 1/30th of the energy.
The concept attracted some snark on Twitter:
Eatsa promises that all its meals are nutritious and relatively healthy.
I ordered the burrito bowl, which was loaded with guac, salsa, cheese, portabello mushrooms, corn, tortilla chips, beans, and, of course, quinoa.
Although it had the most calories of any of the Chef's Choice options - 646 per meal compared to many options that only hit the high-400s - it packed a lot fewer calories than a veggie bowl from Chipotle, which has around 1,300 calories.
Sometimes the noisiness of a place like Chipotle where you have to scream to the server as they try to rapid-fire shuffle people through the line stresses me out, so I appreciated the ease of ordering through a tablet and watching my food appear.