Einstein Bros. Bagels

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Einstein Bros. Bagels
Private
Industry quick-casual[1] restaurant
Founded Golden, Colorado
Headquarters Lakewood, Colorado
Owner JAB Holding Company and BDT Capital Partners
Parent Einstein Noah Restaurant Group, Inc.[1]
Website EinsteinBros.com
Einstein Bros. restaurant, Plymouth, Michigan

Einstein Bros. Bagels is a bagel and coffee chain in the United States.

Einstein Bros. was created by the chain restaurant corporation Boston Chicken (now Boston Market) in 1995, as a way to market breakfast foods. The chain is now owned by Einstein and Noah Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary of Einstein Noah Restaurant Group, Inc.[1]

In 2014, Einstein Noah Restaurant Group was acquired by JAB Holding Company and BDT Capital Partners.[2]

Boston Chicken, Inc. originally formed the Einstein and Noah Bagel Corporation as Progressive Bagel Concepts, Incorporated (PBCI) in March 1995, when it purchased three retail bagel chains, all located in regions of the United States that did not have longstanding bagel traditions. These companies included Offerdahl's Bagel Gourmet, Incorporated (Fort Lauderdale), Bagel & Bagel, Incorporated (Kansas City) and Brackman Brothers, Incorporated (Salt Lake City). Each found that their stores were similar in that they offered both original and new bagel flavors in rich neighborhoods where the customers had relatively little previous exposure to bagels.[3]

Noah's Bagels was founded by Noah Alper on College Avenue in Berkeley, California. In 1996, the chain of 38 stores was sold to Einstein Bros. for $100 million.[4]

New World Coffee, founded in the early 1990s by Ramin Kamfar, an investment banker who left his finance career to open a coffee shop.[5] It bought Manhattan Bagel out of bankruptcy in 1998.[6] The combined company purchased Washington, D.C.-based Chesapeake Bagel Bakery in 1999 when that chain had 89 stores, giving Manhattan approximately 350 locations.[7]

By 2000, Einstein Bros. was in financial trouble, having loaned too much money to franchisees.[5] After it declared bankruptcy, New World Coffee, which had earlier attempted an unsuccessful hostile takeover, bought the company out of bankruptcy for $190 million.[8]

See also

References

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  3. Portable, versatile, tasty: Reasons we like our bagels Bakery' s offerings include nontraditional chocolate chip The Dallas Morning News – Wednesday, November 13, 1996 Author: Kendall Morgan, Staff Writer of The Dallas Morning News
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External links