On January 24, the first PLNT Burger in New York Cityâand the chainâs first standalone locationâdebuted in Union Square. We spoke with Chef Mendelsohn about the Greek and Jewish comfort foods that built his early palate, how surfing inspired his plant-based shift, and why he champions fast food.
Spike Mendelsohn is one of the foremost food policy chefs in America today. Though the former Top Chef contestant grew up in a family of philanthropic restaurant owners, it wasnât until he moved from St. Petersburg, Florida, to Washington D.C. to launch his own restaurant that he started to understand the political power of food. Surrounded by politicians and staffers advocating for change in their respective sectors, Mendelsohn felt inspired to apply a similarly activist attitude to what he cared most about: food systems. In 2008, he opened his Capitol Hill restaurant, Good Stuff Eatery, which quickly became a favorite hub for politicians and changemakers, including Former President Barack Obama and Former First Lady Michelle Obama.
For Mendelsohn, the restaurantâs political location became a springboard for joining the urgent national conversations surrounding farming, food access, and sustainability. Good Stuff sourced from local farms, ââplanted trees in Brazilâs CaraĂva River Basin with The Nature Conservancy, and donated labor and funds to JosĂ© AndrĂ©sâ crisis relief organization DC Central Kitchen.
But it wasnât until 2014 that a lightbulb went off for the former Top Chef. His life was upended when he attended the Chefs Boot Camp for Policy and Change, hosted by food equity advocate Michel Nischan in Pescadero, California. Instead of quaffing wine and networking, Mendelsohn and 14 other chefs rolled up their sleeves and brainstormed creative solutions to food issues, from sustainability to food insecurity. He soon found willing mentors in not only Nischan, but also AndrĂ©s and Tom Colicchio.
âChefs are taking on a new role in the worldâone that goes beyond your restaurantâs four walls,â Mendelsohn says. âThe food policy boot camp makes chefs realize the voice that they have.â

In 2015, Mendelsohn took on the role of chair of the D.C. Food Policy Council, which unites community leaders and government staff to further the sustainability, health, and access of D.C.âs food systems. In 2019, he and Seth Goldman of Honest Tea opened their first plant-based concept, PLNT Burger, in Silver Spring, Maryland. Mendelsohnâs fast-food vegan burgers were instantaneously craveable, even during a pandemic. Whole Foods rapidly licensed Mendelsohn to open eight other PLNT Burger locations across the mid-Atlantic region in just two years, where the instantly identifiable classics like double cheeseburgers, spicy fried chikân sandwiches, sweet potato fries and soft serve won rave reviews. We chatted with Mendelsohn about how he created the perfect formula for a vegan fast-food restaurant that could trigger a plant-based revolution.
LIVEKINDLY: You come from a restaurant family. Your mom is Greek and your dad is Jewish. Did you grow up with home-cooked family meals from both those traditions?
Mendelsohn: My mother is a rockstar chefâsheâs a big restaurateur and comes from Greek restaurateurs, and sheâs been in food her whole life. My dad was the oddball from an accounting background, and I always joke that I grew up in a Grewish family. We celebrated food of all sorts, whether it was Hanukkah, Passover, or Christmas foods, so I got the best of both worlds. My mom cooks a home-cooked meal every single day, from Greek pastitsio and moussaka and keftedes, to the Jewish foods she learned to make because of my dad, like matzo ball soup and latkes. Her latkes are the best in the world. I think thatâs why comfort is the thing that I love the most. I love the tasting dinner, but really, my best meals are family meals.
LIVEKINDLY: How did those childhood experiences construct your worldview of food?
Mendelsohn: Growing up like that really made me a worldly personânot only did I grow up in that environment, but our family, we were globetrotters. We werenât wealthy, but we lived in Spain for a few years, and it influenced my global thought process on cuisine and even religion, because there are multiple different ways to look at both of those, and thatâs okay. People can have faith in what they have faith in, and my faith is surfing.
LIVEKINDLY: PLNT serves a fishless sandwich called the Save the Bay Fillet, made with Good Catch Foods crispy fish-free filet and house-made tartar sauce. Were the oceans and surfing a major influence in opening a vegan restaurant for you?
Mendelsohn: Yes, that definitely had an impact. The plastic waste in the oceans is a huge environmental issue, and through that world, Iâve definitely been inspired to do a lot of what I do. I also just love the oceans and have been a water guy for a long time, and have fallen in love with surfing. Surfing is kind of spiritual in a wayâitâs very rhythmic, because if you think about it, most of your time surfing is spent waiting in the water for a wave. It inspires me when I go surfing, to think about everything Iâm doing on planet earth. I come up with a lot of good ideas out there.

LIVEKINDLY: Plastic waste is devastating, but so is the methane created by food waste. How do you manage food waste at PLNT Burger?
Mendelsohn: Fast food has a reputation of being wasteful, but we have very little waste at our restaurantâitâs pretty incredible. We keep menus small, cook to order, and do portion controls, so weâre very cognizant. We have waste logs that we use, and our Director of Operations Mike Colletti makes sure we order properly and train our staff. Food waste is such a buzzword, and itâs true that we as a society waste a lot of food, but itâs really distribution in America that we have to figure out, because thatâs how we waste a lot of food. A lot of food is being wasted before it even gets to plates.
LIVEKINDLY: Your staple menu item is the PLNT Burger, a single Beyond Meat patty with tomato, lettuce, pickles, caramelized onion, and PLNT sauce on a potato bun. Did you set out to make the vegan version of the Big Mac?
Mendelsohn: I never set out to open up a burger place that was just for vegans and vegetarians, actually. We set out to do an indulgent, greasy, delicious burger spot that just happens to be plant-basedâthat opens us up for a lot more consumers, who want to make some changes but donât know how to. Burgers are a category everyone loves, and one of the highest-selling food groups in the world, so if people can start to switch up their burger intake with plant-based once in a while, itâs an easy entry point for the vegan lifestyle and better for you and the planet.
LIVEKINDLY: Your burgers are delicious and well-dressed, but thereâs nothing wrong with a super basic Beyond burger either. Are we at a turning point for the vegan burger, and also for plant-based eating?
Mendelsohn: We think so. Weâre going to look back on this moment in time 100 years from now, and say, âThatâs the moment when America started eating more plants as a whole.â Weâre in this renaissance moment of plant-based food. People come to our PLNT Burger locations in Whole Foods and have the Beyond Burgers in their shopping baskets, and they ask us how to cook them before buying themâit happens all the time, because people are still getting used to them. Thereâs an element of advocacy and education with our brand. Plant-based food is now crossing over into mass appeal and getting normalizedâand thatâs where we want to live, because now weâre experiencing a massive change in our food system because of that shift, including in how we grow.

LIVEKINDLY: So now that weâre seeing this plant-based mainstreaming, will Top Chef will ever host a vegan or vegetarian season?
Mendelsohn: I just asked Tom Colicchio that question a couple weeks ago. He made me realize that they once had a vegan challenge and Natalie Portman was the guest judge, and it went really well. He didnât say that theyâre ready to have a whole vegan Top Chef battle, but I think the moment is now.
LIVEKINDLY: Youâve mentioned expanding PLNT Burger across the New York Tri-State region. What else is next for PLNT Burger?
Mendelsohn: Well, weâre bringing a new menu item that weâll be releasing, made from a very unique leftover: the fruiting body of the oyster mushroom. On a farm visit, someone told me that they sometimes take home the fruiting body remainders that are left over after oyster mushrooms get harvested, and that they taste just like chicken when theyâre sauteed. This fruiting body is delicious and super nutrient dense, and weâre able to make it into a texturized chicken without processing anything. The only issue is supply, and now that weâre in New York City, we have to have something consistent, so weâre doing our chicken sandwich with Gardein. Now weâre going to use the fruiting body in a great innovation for another menu item weâll be releasing.
Source: Cdn.livekindly.co