The Food
Thirty seconds of patience.
A lifetime of hunger satisfied.
Hover any tile to read the story behind it — the farm, the technique, the grandmother who taught it.

"Sourced from Halal farms in the San Joaquin Valley."
Lamb raised on native grasses — 72-hour dry marinade
"Dough pressed by hand. No machines touch this bread."
Heritage wheat · baked at 900°F for 90 seconds

"The knife angle hasn't changed since 1962."
Each pull of the blade — 18 seconds of patience

"Fermented 10 days in apple cider vinegar and beet."
Turns pink by day 3 — ready by day 10

"Three folds. One perfect cross-section."
Lamb · garlic cream · pickled turnip · fresh herb

"Toum made fresh each morning. No preservatives."
Garlic from Gilroy · cold-pressed California olive oil

"Phones down. Both hands. That's the only rule."
240 guests · Sonoma Valley · September 2024

"We plate for the table, not the individual."
Every event gets a communal herb board
"Charcoal from oak. Lit two hours before service."
Temperature held between 280–320°F for six hours

"Pulled at 5am. On your wrap by noon."
Parsley from Capay Valley · sumac from Lebanon

"We stay open until 2am. Some jobs don't end at five."
Late-shift menu: same quality, half the wait

"The spit becomes the centerpiece. No decor needed."
Outdoor setup in 45 minutes · serves up to 500
"We buy from farms we've visited. No exceptions."
Seven farms · three counties · one philosophy

"Catering means more than the main. We build the whole table."
Hummus · baba ganoush · olives · house-pickled veg

"The burn on the edge is not a mistake."
Stone oven at 900°F · 90 seconds · no exceptions

"The spice that costs more than silver. We use it anyway."
Iranian saffron · hand-harvested · steeped 12 hours
"Twelve seats. No reservations. Worth the wait."
Open: Mon–Fri 11am–2pm · Wed–Sat midnight

"When the spit runs dry, the pan takes over."
Lamb shoulder · charred lemon · za'atar butter
Event Catering · 20 to 500 Guests
Bring the spit to your gathering.
The moment the lamb starts to shave, the room goes quiet. Then everyone starts eating with both hands.
Who Eats Here
Nurses, planners, and
people who know the queue is worth it.
I work the night shift at SF General. By midnight my options are gas station sushi or Fold. It's not a hard choice. The lamb is still warm when I unwrap it at the nurses' station.

Priya Nambiar
RN, ICU · San Francisco General
We do catering for a lot of corporate events. Fold was the first time guests stopped talking about the deal and started talking about the food. My client asked for the number before dessert.

Marcus Webb
Event Director · Webb & Associates, Chicago
The lunch line wraps around the corner at 12:15. I know this because I've stood in it every Tuesday for eight months. You start a conversation with whoever's next to you. It's that kind of place.

Danielle Kowalczyk
Product Manager · Salesforce Tower
Free Download
Download Our Event Menu
Full catering menu with pricing tiers, setup requirements, and sample communal spreads. A PDF you'll actually keep open while planning.
Still Hungry?
The spit doesn't stop.
Neither should you.
Catering for 20 to 500 guests. Outdoor fields, rooftop terraces, ballrooms, backyards. Wherever you gather, we bring the fire.
