St-Hubert
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File:St-Hubert logo.svg | |
Private (1951-2016) Subsidiary (2016-present) |
|
Industry | Casual dining restaurants |
Founded | 1951 |
Headquarters | Laval, Quebec, Canada |
Products | Rotisserie Chicken, Salads, Ribs |
Parent | Recipe Unlimited (2016–present) |
Website | st-hubert.com |
St-Hubert BBQ Ltd is a chain of Canadian casual dining restaurants best known for its rotisserie chicken. St-Hubert is most popular in Quebec, and in other French-Canadian areas such as Eastern Ontario and New Brunswick. St-Hubert is the 16th largest restaurant chain operating in Canada.[citation needed] The chain enjoys the highest customer loyalty of any restaurant in Canada, aside from Tim Hortons, according to industry analysis.[1]
In March 2016, St-Hubert agreed to be purchased by Toronto-area based Cara Operations (now known as Recipe Unlimited), the owner of the rival Swiss Chalet rotisserie chicken chain, for $537 million.[2][3] Cara increased its restaurant presence in Quebec as the St-Hubert chicken deal closed in September 2016.[4]
History
The first restaurant opened in September 1951 on Saint Hubert Street in Montreal, just south of Beaubien street. This branch still operates today, but has been converted to a St-Hubert Express take-out restaurant. The founding family of Hélène and René Léger copied similar barbecue restaurants in the city.[5][6]
St-Hubert began selling its gravy in supermarkets across Quebec in 1965. The company also sells its barbecue sauce in the ready-to-serve format, desserts, seasonings, and frozen chicken in supermarkets.[6]
The original St-Hubert Chicken mascot was created and designed by Disney animator Jack Dunham.[when?][7][8] Dunham also produced St-Hubert's first television commercials.[8] However, the current St-Hubert mascot, which has been in use since the early 1970s, was not created by Dunham.
St-Hubert also opened a restaurant in Fort Lauderdale, Florida in the 1970s, serving Canadians who spent their vacations in southern Florida. The restaurant was known for its ability to serve its customers in French, as most of its clients were French Canadians, which motivated the employers of their own accord to seek French-speaking employees. The location closed down sometime in the 1990s.[citation needed]
In 1983, St-Hubert attempted another type of expansion, this time in Italian cuisine. St-Hubert inaugurates the Pastelli restaurant and announces that it wants to open 30 to 40 other franchises across Quebec during the following five years. The results were conclusive and other franchises were opened, but St-Hubert decided to end the experiment in the late 1980s.[9]
A longtime purveyor of Pepsi products, St-Hubert switched to Coca-Cola products in the early 2000s.[citation needed]
In 2005, St-Hubert voluntarily became the first restaurant chain in Quebec to ban smoking inside its restaurants. This was one year before the province of Quebec made it mandatory.[6]
St-Hubert's president was quoted in a Postmedia News article in October 2011 as saying that the company was considering adding halal and kosher products.[10] It has since recanted in the aftermath of Quebec's reasonable accommodation debate.[improper synthesis?]
On March 31, 2016, Ontario-based Cara Operations, owner of the Swiss Chalet chain of rotisserie chicken restaurants, announced that it would acquire St-Hubert in the summer of 2016 for CAD$537 million.[11][12] Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ), an investment management firm, had presented an offer to acquire a minority share in St-Hubert, but was subsequently declined.[13] Léger sought buyers within Quebec, but did not encounter any companies he was comfortable selling to.[14] The sale was completed on September 2, 2016.[15]
In 2017, Montreal actor Jay Baruchel mentioned St-Hubert as his favorite restaurant to visit when visiting the city during an interview on Jimmy Kimmel Live!. St-Hubert spokesperson Josée Vaillancourt later reached out to Baruchel after the actor claimed that he was willing to also appear in a commercial for the restaurant.[16]
Operations
St-Hubert's service area has little overlap with the similar Swiss Chalet chain, which exited the Quebec market in the early 2000s, although there was no agreement between the chains. Following the closure or rebranding (as independent restaurants) of St-Hubert's remaining Toronto area locations over the following few years, the chains now only overlap in the Ottawa area, and in Moncton and Fredericton, New Brunswick. Restaurants in the Saint John, New Brunswick, area closed in 2013.[17] Locations were in Halifax Nova Scotia & St. John's, Newfoundland also existed, but was closed around the late 1980s, early 1990s. However, in a 2007 interview with La Presse, St-Hubert CEO Jean-Pierre Léger suggested that the company was considering re-entering other eastern Canadian markets.[18]
In January 2011, St-Hubert announced that its expansion plans included the opening of three Toronto area locations of the St-Hubert Express concept. It was also considering entering markets outside Canada. At around the same time, the company briefly re-entered the Kingston marketplace with a St-Hubert Express, which closed about a year after opening.[19]
The St-Hubert locations operate as full-service restaurants, resto-bars, and 'St-Hubert Express' locations (closer in style to fast food restaurants, also with take-out, drive-thru and delivery).[20] The bright yellow cars delivering food have carried the slogan "Putt-Putt Ding-Ding".
See also
- List of Canadian restaurant chains
- List of chicken restaurants
- List of assets owned by Recipe Unlimited
References
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- ↑ Cara beefs up restaurant presence in Quebec as St-Hubert chicken deal closes | CTV News. Ctvnews.ca (September 2, 2016). Retrieved on 2016-12-24.
- ↑ Script error: No such module "In lang". Restaurant à Montréal – Centre-Ville – Downtown. St-Hubert. Retrieved on December 24, 2016.
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to St-Hubert Restaurant. |
- Articles with dead external links from October 2010
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- Articles with unsourced statements from January 2021
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- Articles that may contain original research from August 2014
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- Official website not in Wikidata
- Recipe Unlimited
- 1951 establishments in Quebec
- Companies based in Laval, Quebec
- Restaurant chains in Canada
- Restaurants established in 1951
- Poultry restaurants
- 2016 mergers and acquisitions