In my latest feature, I tell the story of how Costas Spiliadis, the 78-year-old founder of Estiatorio Milos, immigrated from Greece and expanded a small restaurant in Montreal into an iconic New York seafood restaurant—as well as 10 others spanning from Las Vegas to Dubai. Four more, including in Palm Beach and Toronto, are nearly open.
The profile is set during a lunch interview I had with Spiliadis a few weeks ago at his restaurant on 55th Street in Midtown Manhattan. We talked numbers and Milos’ future over a melange of the restaurant’s greatest hits, including classic feta-topped horiatiki salad and tzatziki hidden under a pile of zucchini chips.
Spiliadis’ restaurant group is one of the most powerful family-owned firms in luxury hospitality. The Milos business is 100% owned by Spiliadis and his kin and, in an era when outside funding is pouring into the industry to replicate popular restaurants around the world, Spiliadis is charting growth on his own terms.
Thanks to sparing no cost on the fish it buys, or the market prices it is willing to charge its customers (which can often tick up past $100 for a plate of whole grilled fish), Milos retains more profits than most high-end restaurants. All of that profit helps Spiliadis reinvest, but how he actually expands is critical. Each new location threatens the reputation of what Spiliadis has taken five decades to build.
“Using cash flow to build new restaurants is a slower process, but it’s more solid,” says Spiliadis. “We control the character of our restaurants. That would be my biggest nightmare: to go to one of my restaurants and not recognize my soul there.”
— Chloe Sorvino, Staff Writer
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What’s Fresh
The $100 Million Family-Owned Greek Restaurant Empire Taking On Nobu And Carbone
Costas Spiliadis’ Milos hospitality kingdom has eleven restaurants from Miami to Dubai, along with yachts for charter and a boutique hotel in Greece. And he remains hungry for new ventures.
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Growth equity firm Siddhi Capital, best known for offering in-house operational expertise to food and beverage brands, has closed its $135 million Fund II.
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A group of Polish divers found a treasure trove of champagne that could have been en route to a Russian tsar. A master sommelier answers whether it’d be drinkable today.
Field Notes
The grilled octopus at Milos on 55th Street in New York City is a favorite among regulars.
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