Regional delivery giants like Singapore-based Grab and Indonesia's GoJek have also jumped on the trend as the global ghost kitchen industry is expected to grow more than 12 percent each year
Employees from Taiwan company Just Kitchen, a network of "ghost kitchens" that make delivery-only food, preparing to bake bread for takeaway meals at one of their locations in Taipei.
Image: Photography Sam Yeh / AFP
In an industrial unit on the outskirts of Taipei chefs are plating meals that will never be served in a restaurant: welcome to the world of "ghost kitchens".
Even before the pandemic sent an earthquake through the global restaurant trade, the "Amazonification" of commercial kitchens was well underway, but coronavirus lockdowns and restrictions have fuelled explosive growth in Asia.
The recent boom in food delivery apps meant customers were already used to having restaurant quality meals quickly delivered to their homes.
To meet that demand a growing number of restaurants set up delivery only kitchens—also known as "cloud kitchens"—or rented space in ones.