Los Angeles Times

Selling out fast, meat-free patty is well done and rare

- By Deena Shanker, Leslie Patton and Lydia Mulvany Shanker, Patton and Mulvany write for Bloomberg.

Restaurant chains Red Robin and White Castle are reporting shortages of Impossible Foods Inc.’s popular meat-free patties, underscori­ng the pressure the plant-based food company faces trying to manufactur­e for the mass market and get a head start on a growing crop of rivals.

Calls to a dozen Red Robins and the same number of White Castles on Thursday found that only two locations of each chain had Impossible Foods Inc.’s patties available. Individual locations from New York to Hillsboro, Ore., with the burger on their menu told customers last week that theywere fresh out.

White Castle said Friday that the patties would be back no later than Monday. It said the shortage was related to a change in the shape of its Impossible Sliders, to square from round.

“As we geared up for the change, we had short-term shortages here and there, but not universall­y,” White Castle said in an email.

The corporate offices of Red Robin Gourmet Burgers Inc. did not respond to requests for comment.

The hit-or-miss availabili­ty of Impossible Foods items at the chains, which each have hundreds of restaurant­s, adds to shortages of the popular meatfree patties that mom-andpop restaurant­s have been reporting for weeks.

“We’re waiting for it to come in,” said Rebecca Sparks, 34, supervisor at Left Coast Food and Juice in Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborho­od. She said there is no word on when it will be available again.

Rachel Konrad, spokeswoma­n for closely held Impossible Foods, told Bloomberg that the gap between supply and demand “has nothing to do with” a nationwide expansion effort underway with Burger King.

The Impossible Whopper at Burger King was tested in St. Louis in April and expanded to more cities. Under terms of a deal inked this year, Impossible Foods patties will be available at Burger Kings nationwide by the end of this year. The chain operates more than 7,300 restaurant­s in the U.S.

Every Burger King location contacted by Bloomberg, including those in St. Louis, Miami; Montgomery, Ala., and Columbus, Ga., said the patties were in stock. Burger King did not respond to requests for comment.

The supply hiccups may be a sign of how eager companies are to expand market share as demand soars for meat alternativ­es and start-ups that make the products increasing­ly go national.

While overall meat consumptio­n is rising globally, including in the U.S., there’s also been a rise in plantbased diets in wealthy nations. This has spawned an expanding array of meat substitute­s, including products that are meat-like but made from plant matter and meat that’s grown in a lab instead of taken from slaughtere­d livestock. Lab-grown meat isn’t yet available to the public.

As major restaurant chains latch on to the plantbased meat craze, they are going to want assurances that once an item is placed on the menu, it can stay there, said Linda Ashbrook, director of innovation and customer solutions at Datassenti­al.

“Those companies have to prove to these bigger brands that they can, in fact, deliver day in and day out,” she said.

Impossible Foods has said it would sell its products in retail outlets this year, too. It’s awaiting Food and Drug Administra­tion approval for its “magic” ingredient known as heme, which is made with geneticall­y modified yeast. That ingredient gives the company’s soybased burgers their meaty taste, and because it imparts a red color to the raw product, it requires extra approval for grocery sales.

Rival Beyond Meat Inc., which has seen its stock rise about 500% since its recent public offering, said last week that its plant-based sausage breakfast sandwiches are available at almost 4,000 Tim Hortons locations across Canada.

 ?? Christian K. Lee Los Angeles Times ?? IMPOSSIBLE FOODS INC. is struggling to keep up with the demand for its meat-free burger patties. Red Robin and White Castle have reported shortages.
Christian K. Lee Los Angeles Times IMPOSSIBLE FOODS INC. is struggling to keep up with the demand for its meat-free burger patties. Red Robin and White Castle have reported shortages.

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