The Telegram (St. John's)

Vegan quick fix

Fast food chains look to capitalize on vegetarian, vegan trend with new items

- BY ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

The once meat-dominated world of fast-food and casual restaurant­s is starting to cater to the one-in-10 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 onein-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 plantbased 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 vice-president 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.

Millennial­s — a younger generation now in their 20s and 30s — tend to be concerned about health and beauty, as well as animal welfare.

But baby boomers born near the end of the Second World War and now reaching their senior years are also increasing­ly looking to meat alternativ­es amid concerns about extending their lives, said Whiteman.

Rising beef prices and concern around antibiotic use in agricultur­e may also be pushing consumers toward alternativ­e proteins, Robert Carter, executive director of foodservic­e for market-research firm NPD Group.

But in the end, Carter said, the main impetus for the trend is the improvemen­t in vegetarian and vegan options, which have come a long way in satisfying taste buds since they first started to appear.

“The innovation within the vegan meal categories has really improved dramatical­ly... so that it actually really tastes good.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An A&W Restaurant in Toronto is photograph­ed July 9. People who occasional­ly avoid meat, vegetarian­s and even vegans increasing­ly have more options when parsing menus at restaurant­s. 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.
THE CANADIAN PRESS An A&W Restaurant in Toronto is photograph­ed July 9. People who occasional­ly avoid meat, vegetarian­s and even vegans increasing­ly have more options when parsing menus at restaurant­s. 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.

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