INTERVIEW
I
t seems an oxymorontoclaim
that fast food is goodforyou.Yet
that is the core pitchbehindthe
success of Mexicanfoodchain
Mad Mex. It is alsobehindits
current push into Asia, andoneofthe
main attributes that could standin
its favour as a US-owned rivalfast
food giant, Taco Bell, returnstoour
shores later this year in a bigway.
Even though it has always promoted
its healthy ingredients, MadMexis
doubling down on what it viewsas
a major point of difference.
The chain’s tag is “Your Bodyis Your
Temple”. It claims that its customers
should never have to choosebetweena
quick meal and quality, healthyfood.Its
website features a nutritionalcalendar
so people can check levels ofcalories,
carbs, fats, sugars and more in all of its
dishes. It even publishes recipes so they
can be cooked at home. Now it also caters
for vegans and people with allergies and
gluten intolerance, and was the first quick
service restaurant to sell RSPCA chicken.
Mad Mex founder Clovis Young says he
became hooked on Mexican food when
growing up in California. Surfing or boo-
gie boarding while holidaying with his
grandparents in San Diego would work
up quite an appetite. “After four hours in
the water, you buy a burrito with rice and
beans and guacamole, and the juice drips
down your chin. It was the best thing in
the whole world. I really fell in love with
Mexican food.”
But his family moved to Massachusetts,
and there was no Mexican food to be found
anywhere. For 20 years, the notion of mak-
ing burritos stayed with him but it didn’t
materialise until he moved to Australia.
“Here there was a big Mexican eating
culture in the ’80s, with sit-down restau-
rants, hen’s nights and tequila shots. They
were places you would go once a year and
have a bender. It was very much Tex-Mex,
very unhealthy food. Yet, inherently, Mex-
ican is very simple. It is peasant food. It is
rice cooked with vegetables and garlic, and
beans, and simple meats with chilli mari-
nades. There is no processing. It’s cooked
at home. It’s that simple. What we put on
the table is everything that you can make
at home.”
Mad Mex has 60 stores in Australia and
more than 10 in New Zealand. It owns 20 of
the stores locally, the rest being franchised.
“When I started the business, we had three
restaurants in Sydney. We had great prod-
ucts, but I didn’t know the first thing about
franchising. I didn’t know how to do a lease
deal. Phillip Blanco, who had been with
Just mad
about
Mexico
STORY ALAN DEANS
Favourite pastime is enduro dirt-bike riding because
it burns a lot of nervous energy. He invests in shares,
describing his philosophy as stockpiling cash to have
the firepower for cheap opportunities when they
arise, then buying and holding. Applies the
same thinking to property, buying his first
Sydney apartment last year when
prices fell.
Clovis Young
The former Wall Street equities trader
migrated to Australia with a yearn to make
Mexican food. Age 45; lives in Sydney’s
Rushcutters Bay.
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