Impossible Burgers Touching Beef Whoppers Have Vegans on Alert: Citi’s bloodletting begins

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Maynard S. Clark

unread,
Aug 4, 2019, 10:22:58 PM8/4/19
to
Is a vegan burger that touches beef fat still a vegan burger? That’s the question fast-food chains are grappling with as they increasingly add plant-based options to their crowded griddles.  
Checkout

Impossible Burgers Touching Beef Whoppers Have Vegans on Alert

By , and 
August 1, 2019, 1:00 PM EDT Updated on August 1, 2019, 2:27 PM EDT
  •  
    Burger King will cook the plant-based patties on same broiler
  •  
    It’s a problem for vegans but not for flexitarian population
Burger King’s Impossible Whopper
Burger King’s Impossible Whopper Photographer: Michael Thomas/Getty Images

LISTEN TO ARTICLE

 
3:56

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

Is a vegan burger that touches beef fat still a vegan burger?

That’s the question fast-food chains are grappling with as they increasingly add plant-based options to their menus -- but not necessarily the expanded infrastructure to cook the patties separately.

Related: Hardee’s to Start Selling Beyond Meat’s Sausages and Burgers

At Burger King, for example, which will begin offering a burger from Impossible Foods Inc. nationwide next week, the employees will cook the trendy patty with the same broiler as regular burgers and chicken unless a customer asks for it to be prepared separately, said Chris Finazzo, Burger King’s president in the Americas region. A&W in the U.S., which is testing the Beyond Meat Inc. patty at about 20 locations, also cooks the burgers on the same grill, a spokesman said.

“We use the same cooking method,” Burger King’s Finazzo said. “This product tastes exactly like a Whopper. We wouldn’t want to lend our name to just anything. It looks like beef, smells like beef, has the same texture as beef.”

Restaurant Brands International Inc.-owned Burger King says 90% of the people who ordered the Impossible Whopper during a trial run this spring are meat eaters, which means most diners may not care if their faux-meat patties are cooked alongside classic beef ones. It doesn’t label the product as vegan and allows guests to ask for their Impossible Whopper to be cooked in the oven instead, according to the company.

But for consumers who actually avoid meat, the potential for contamination could be concerning. Even so, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said that faux-meat’s presence in growing numbers of restaurants is a positive development.

“It’s really not about the personal purity of what the products are being cooked next to,” said Ashley Byrne, a campaign director for PETA. “People are choosing vegan options because they care about animals and the environment. We think that these benefits really override any concerns about cross-contamination -- obviously if someone has an allergy or intolerance, that’s different.”

See Also: Impossible Foods Gets FDA Color Nod, Plans Output Expansion

Impossible Foods said it can’t control how its restaurants cook its product. “We could not force (and we don’t even ask) our restaurant partners to change their business practices, including where and how they cook their burgers,” a spokeswoman for Impossible said.

Beyond Meat didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.

It’s easier to separate meat from non-meat at fast-food chains where food is cooked in convection ovens or other more individualized methods, rather than with large broilers or grills. At Dunkin’ locations offering a Beyond Meat sausage, the sandwich is cooked separately on individual pieces of parchment paper and the patties are stored “on their own individual portion trays to further prevent cross-contamination,” a spokesman said.

Tim Hortons, another Restaurant Brands chain, said it also cooks and stores separately its Beyond Meat items from its meat.

‘Vegetarian Experience’

White Castle says it cooks the Impossible Slider on a separate grill. If space is limited during a busy time, workers clean the grill before cooking it “out of respect for those who are seeking a vegan or vegetarian experience,” vice president Jamie Richardson said in an email.

Carl’s Jr., which carries Beyond Meat, said its restaurants do their best to avoid contact with real meat, “but we do handle animal protein back of house so we cannot claim fully that it’s prepared in any form or fashion,” said Owen Klein, vice president of global culinary innovation for CKE Restaurants, the chain’s parent company.

“We hold all of the plant-based products in separate areas, the utensils used for them are dedicated to those products solely and we do our best to cook to our consumers standards,” he said.

Flexitarians

But most Americans, except those practicing a strict vegetarian or vegan lifestyle, may not really care. A growing group of consumers are calling themselves flexitarians, meaning they’re trying to eat less meat, not eliminate it all together.

At A&W in the U.S., for example, guests were asking for the Beyond Meat burger with bacon and cheese, said Sarah Mueller, vice president of marketing. As a result, this week the restaurants started offering the doctored-up version.

(Updates to include responses from PETA and CKE Restaurants)
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Bloomberg <nor...@mail.bloombergbusiness.com>
Date: Thu, Aug 1, 2019 at 5:26 PM
Subject: Citi’s bloodletting begins

Bloomberg

Peter Thiel, the billionaire Silicon Valley supporter of U.S. President Donald Trump, may find it easy to back the China trade war since his investments have barely been affected by it. Longtime Trump friend Tom Barrack was an early advocate of the administration’s efforts to strengthen ties with Saudi Arabia. Now his firm, Colony Capital, is doing business with its sovereign wealth fund. However, while JSW Steel (USA) was a big fan of Trump’s metal tariffs, it eventually discovered that it didn’t get an exemption for imports it needed. Now it’s suing. —David E. Rovella

Here are today’s top stories

Citigroup has started firing traders as part of a planned termination of 400 people, joining Deutsche Bank and Societe Generale in eliminating hundreds of jobs across equities and fixed-income trading divisions.

The Federal Trade Commission is investigating acquisitions by Facebook as part of a nascent antitrust probe.

Former Vice President Joseph Biden emerged bruised but intact after Wednesday night’s Democratic presidential debate. But it was the legacy of his former boss that is increasingly under attack.

Justin Fox writes in Bloomberg Opinion that one reason economic growth in the U.S. is slowing is uncertainty stemming from Trump’s tweet storms on trade, the border, government shutdowns and the Fed.

Bloomberg Businessweek reports how banks, fintechs and peer-to-peer lenders are aggressively courting Generation Z in China.

Is a vegan burger that touches beef fat still a vegan burger? That’s the question fast-food chains are grappling with as they increasingly add plant-based options to their crowded griddles.

What’s Lorcan Roche Kelly thinking? The Bloomberg cross-asset editor is comparing Fed Chair Jerome Powell with a famous predecessor, Alan Greenspan. Powell described Wednesday’s rate cut as a “mid-cycle adjustment,” raising comparisons with Greenspan’s mid-1990s cuts in order to prolong an upswing. But that’s where the parallel stops.

What you’ll need to know tomorrow

What you’ll want to read in Bloomberg Pursuits

How Professional Cycling Is Trying to Save Itself

Behind the carefully orchestrated travelogue that is the Tour de France, won this week by Colombian Egan Bernal, the sport is suffering. In recent years, teams have been folding at an alarming rate, leaving riders and staff scrambling to find jobs. Cycling’s financial model has created a world of haves and have-nots. Now, its biggest stakeholders are trying to fix it.

 

 

Like Bloomberg’s Evening Briefing? Subscribe to Bloomberg.com. You’ll get our unmatched global news coverage and two premium daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close, and much, much more. See our limited-time introductory offer.

Tune in to Bloomberg wherever you are. Download the Radio.com app so you can listen to Bloomberg Radio anytime, getting instant access to breaking news and analysis from business leaders and influencers available nowhere else.

Download the Bloomberg app: It’s available for iOS and Android.

FOLLOW US Facebook Share Twitter Share SEND TO A FRIEND Share with a friend
You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Evening Briefing newsletter.
Unsubscribe | Bloomberg.com | Contact Us
Bloomberg L.P. 731 Lexington, New York, NY, 10022


--

Maynard

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Maynard S. Clark, MS (Management: Research Administration)
Google Voice (617-615-9672) reaches all phones  - Connect on LinkedIn and FAN at Facebook 
RAC/GCRA, CIPP, RTP, NIH rDNA, REACH Intermediate certificates (+others) GoogleChat: Maynard.Clark | Skype: MaynardClark
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages