Home-grown burger joint <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/lifestyle/food/2022/02/04/salt-is-bringing-a-new-fine-dining-concept-to-saudi-arabia/" target="_blank">Salt </a>is often described as the UAE's first and original food truck. But the company has confirmed to <i>The National</i> that it has no connection to the version launched in London's Leicester Square. It is not the first restaurant to replicate the <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/lifestyle/food/13-of-dubai-s-best-burgers-from-pickl-to-le-burger-1.1018066" target="_blank">popular burger</a> chain's name. While the original does have a branch in Qatar, a separate copycat version opened in Doha in 2005. That same enterprise has now taken "Salt" to London. Overlapping names are not unusual in the restaurant business. However, the London outpost of Salt – like its counterpart in Doha – not only mirrors the UAE chain's name, but also its famed monochromatic packaging. Its Instagram logo is also the same as the original Salt's social page. Further, the Leicester Square restaurant lists sliders as its USP and some of the dish names are exactly the same as Salt UAE, from the Chicken Cheetos and Hook sliders to the Fire fries. Salt was launched by Emirati entrepreneur Amal Al Marri and her Saudi business partner Deem Al Bassam in Dubai in 2014. It is widely credited for changing the pop-up scene with its #FindSalt premise. Foodies, who came to be known as "Salters", had to follow the brand’s social media in order to find the rolling food truck's location on Kite Beach and were rewarded for their efforts with signature shakes and sliders. The Kite Beach branch has since become permanent and Salt has also opened outposts across the Emirates as well as in Saudi Arabia. The brand continues to put on creative pop-ups, including recent iterations at <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/lifestyle/food/2023/01/04/instagrammable-pop-up-salt-camp-brings-burgers-back-to-dubais-museum-of-the-future/" target="_blank">Museum of the Future</a> and <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/lifestyle/food/2023/02/26/salt-camp-pays-tribute-to-banksy-and-other-artists-at-louvre-abu-dhabi-pop-up/" target="_blank">Louvre Abu Dhabi</a>. The Salt Camp in the capital was particularly noteworthy. Themed The Art has Left the Frame, the al fresco venue was made up of food trucks and rows of bright pink tents, each housing quirky interpretations of works by famous artists, including Vincent van Gogh and Banksy. <i>The National</i> contacted Salt London for comment.