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Food

How I'm unlocking my kosher restaurants

Restaurateur, Lee Landau, shares how Coronavirus has affected his business

July 2, 2020 10:57
Reubens_highres_32

ByVictoria Prever, victoria prever

4 min read

Will you be racing out to eat the minute after Shabbat ends tomorrow night? Or maybe you’ve booked a table for Sunday brunch? Lee Landau hopes so — and is optimistic that when diners are finally permitted to eat in, they’ll fill up his restaurant tables.

“Looking at Israel, when restaurants and bars opened, they were fully booked. People were fed up with being at home and wanted a change,” says the 33-year-old restaurateur.

His portfolio (run under the S-Group umbrella) includes Delicatessen; Soyo Café; Pizaza; Pita; Hot Cut and, most recently, Reubens. Lockdown has left 75 per cent of his 200-plus staff on furlough since March. “I’ve had a skeleton staff doing take-aways — a chef, a checker who boxes up the food, plus the mashgiach at each site. Normally, a larger restaurant, like Reubens would have 15 to 20 people working.”

The past few months have been tough. While many of his outlets are takeaway-friendly, the menus at Delicatessen and Reubens needed overhauling to be sufficiently portable.