National Post

YELLOW MUSTARD MESS CLEANED UP BY RESTAURANT

- CHRIS KNIGHT

A condiment conundrum that broke out over an apparent decision by Subway to stop serving yellow mustard at its restaurant­s in Canada seems to have ended with the return of the beloved condiment.

The reported imbroglio stems back to a tweet several months ago by Dr. Sylvain Charlebois of the Agri-food Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University, also known as The Food Professor on X, formerly Twitter.

“Breaking News,” he wrote on X on Feb. 23. “Subway is reportedly discontinu­ing yellow mustard in its Canadian restaurant­s, despite Canada being the world’s largest exporter of condiment mustard seed.” This was followed up by social media posts from others, including X user Emma Jackson, that showed what reportedly appeared to be an internal memo from Subway.

“Yellow Mustard has seen declining demand across Canada,” reads a copy of the memo as shared online by Jackson. “As a result, we have decided to discontinu­e yellow mustard bottles.”

However, as news of the outage began to spread and outraged social media users demanded the return of the condiment, Subway officially started singing a “transition­ary” tune.

Posts on X that referenced the restaurant’s reported decision would receive the same boilerplat­e reply. “At this time, Subway Canada is transition­ing mustard vendors, which may impact the supply of yellow mustard at certain restaurant­s,” it said.

Then, a call from Charlebois on Wednesday (after lunch) confirmed that yellow mustard is back — at least at the Subway nearest his office in Halifax.

“I talked to the employees,” he said of his latest visit to the sandwich shop. “The yellow mustard was discontinu­ed for a while, but it came back last week. They actually brought it back.”

Charlebois said he couldn’t comment on Subway policy based on a single conversati­on with one employee, but he speculates the fast-food chain may have quietly dropped the condiment, unaware of its popularity and patriotic appeal, and then just as quietly reversed the decision.

But a Subway spokespers­on denied any plans for discontinu­ation.

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