The Jerusalem Post

Taste for gourmet burgers heats up US beef demand

Millennial­s feed $5 billion business Cattle-herd growth helps hamburger supply

- By THEOPOLIS WATERS

CHICAGO (Reuters) – As US consumers, especially millennial­s, look for hamburgers with more flavor and fresher beef, more restaurant­s are catering to the taste for “better burgers,” a market where one expert said sales could double in five years.

Sales at companies offering gourmet or “better burgers,” which typically use fresh meat rather than frozen and often include exotic ingredient­s, jumped 15 percent last year compared with 2014 to $5 billion, according to Technomic, a research firm based in Chicago, home of the world’s largest livestock futures trading market.

While that is still a small part of the $80b. in total revenues for quick-serve restaurant­s, Technomic president Darren Tristano said revenues for top-end burgers could double to $10b. by 2021, outpacing growth in regular burgers.

As millennial­s grow older, “they will think of these brands, and not McDonald’s the way the baby boomers have,” Tristano said. Millennial­s are generally defined as the generation that came of age in the new century.

Shake Shack plans to open a further 16 “Shacks” – its trademark trendy restaurant­s – domestical­ly this year, while Chipotle Mexican Grill has applied to trademark “Better Burger” for its new brand of burger chains. Chipotle declined to say when it planned to launch burger chains.

Cargill Foods, one of the country’s largest beef suppliers, said the popularity of premium gourmet hamburgers was one of the factors prompting its purchase of a South Carolina ground-beef processing plant in March.

The United States is already the biggest consumer of beef burgers, with servings of 30 per capita in 2015, compared with 24 per capita in No. 2 consumer Australia, according to New York-based NPD Group, a leading consumer research firm.

Restaurant­s are reaching out to new customers who are willing to pay more for better-tasting, healthier burgers.

A double cheeseburg­er at Shake Shack costs about $8, compared with about $2 at McDonald’s in downtown Chicago. A gourmet burger with Wagyu beef, truffle and foie gras offered by Fleur restaurant at the Mandalay Bay Casino in Las Vegas costs $65.

Even McDonald’s has been tempted to consider fresh beef instead of frozen for its burgers. The company is testing fresh beef in 14 restaurant­s in the Dallas area, spokeswoma­n Lisa McComb told Reuters, instead of flash-frozen beef.

The market offers ample room for growth. The most prominent better-burger stores, such as Five Guys and Smashburge­r, total fewer than 2,500 globally, compared with more than 50,000 outlets collective­ly operated by McDonald’s and Burger King.

BIGGER HERD, MORE BEEF

The rising demand from the shifting trends is unlikely to drain supplies any time soon, meat-industry experts said.

Commercial US beef production should rise to just over 24.6 billion pounds, or 4 percent above 2015’s 23.7 billion pounds, according to Colorado-based Livestock Marketing Informatio­n Center.

The increase comes as US ranchers build up herds that had been depleted by several years of drought to a 63-year low in 2014. Ranchers are producing heavier cattle now that water supplies have been replenishe­d.

“When you add it all up, it’s not that much. I think the increase in supply is plenty to take care of the demand,” said John Nalivka, the president and owner of Sterling Marketing, an industry analytics and consulting firm.

 ?? (Keith Bedford/Reuters) ?? PASSERSBY WALK in front of a Shake Shack restaurant in Manhattan. Restaurant­s are reaching out to new customers who are willing to pay more for better-tasting, healthier burgers.
(Keith Bedford/Reuters) PASSERSBY WALK in front of a Shake Shack restaurant in Manhattan. Restaurant­s are reaching out to new customers who are willing to pay more for better-tasting, healthier burgers.

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