Penticton Herald

Fast food takes on new look

Chains looking to capitalize on vegetarian, vegan trend

- By ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

The once meat-dominated world of fast-food and casual restaurant­s is starting to cater to the one-in-ten Canadian diners who identify as vegetarian or vegan by adding an increasing array of alternativ­e proteins to their menus.

Restaurant­s are the latest link of the food chain taking notice that more consumers are turning to alternativ­e protein because of high meat prices, as well as environmen­tal, humanitari­an and health reasons.

About seven per cent of Canadians consider themselves vegetarian­s and 2.3 per cent identify as vegans — levels that were not previously known, according to a poll conducted earlier this year by Dalhousie University.

That accounts for about one-in-ten diners and grocery shoppers.

Food manufactur­ers have gobbled up plant-based protein makers and grocery stores have started carrying a wider array of meat alternativ­es.

“This has been building for more than a generation, but only began taking off about five years ago,” Michael Whiteman, president of Baum+Whiteman, a food and restaurant consultanc­y firm, said in an email.

Baum+Whiteman predicts plant-based food hitting the mainstream will be the biggest trend in restaurant dining this year.

Until very recently, supermarke­ts have been ground zero for the big expansion of plant-based foods, he said, adding over the last decade sections devoted to vegetarian products doubled, and sometimes tripled, in size.

Even food manufactur­ers closely associated with the meat industry have started to jump aboard the trend.

Ontario-based Maple Leaf Foods has made two important moves into the space in the past two years, acquiring Lightlife Foods, a U.S. company that makes plant-based foods, and Field Roast GrainMeat Co., another American alternativ­e protein maker.

Nine Lightlife Foods products started appearing in Canadian grocery stores, like Sobeys and Walmart, this summer, said Michael Lenahan, Maple Leaf’s vicepresid­ent of marketing for alternativ­e protein.

The meat processor’s acquisitio­ns are part of the company’s ambitious rebranding strategy for a health-conscious era, complete with a new goal: “to be the most sustainabl­e protein company on earth.”

Plant-based protein tends to require less water and land compared to beef production, Lenahan said. But he admits there’s also a big business case for adding plant-protein products to Maple Leaf’s portfolio. “The category is just exploding,” said Lenahan. But the world of fast food has, until recently, lagged behind, often with nary a veggie burger to be found at some of the biggest brands in the food court.

A&W Food Services of Canada Inc. last month launched a plant-based burger made by Beyond Meat, a celebrity-backed California-based company whose burger uses ingredient­s including beet, coconut oil and potato starch to mimic beef’s colouring, juiciness and chew. Last week, the company announced the burgers were temporaril­y out of stock.

The more upscale B.C.-based chain Earls Restaurant­s Ltd. restaurant­s recently unveiled a vegan menu section at several of its U.S. and Canadian locations and Aroma Espresso Bar Canada revealed its so-called power burger, a vegan patty that it says “tastes like a traditiona­l hamburger.”

The demand is largely being driven by millenials. The Dalhousie report showed that among the Canadians who identified as vegetarian­s and vegans, more than half were under the age of 35.

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