PLS. NOTE the Drs
- Medical system has NEVER said a WORD about the chemical crud in Our foods !!
Drs are DANGEROUS poorly educated DRUG pushers - ALL with dangerous side
effects ! After high-profile moves by Chipotle Mexican
Grill Inc. and Panera Bread Co. to purify their menus, restaurant chains are
under pressure to go all-natural — and make sure consumers notice. Papa John's
started posting its ingredients online this year, shining a spotlight on its
food, will now spend $100 million a year to clean up menu
Papa John's
International Inc. is spending $100 million a year to eliminate artificial
ingredients and other additives from its menu, underscoring the cost of the
restaurant industry's shift to more natural foods.
By Craig GiammonaBloomberg
News
The co.
removed monosodium glutamate, or MSG, from its ranch dressing last year and
pulled trans fats from its garlic sauce. Now Papa John's has homed in on a list
of 14 ingredients, including corn syrup, artificial colors and various
preservatives, that will be banished by the end of 2016. The ingredients are
mostly in the chain's dipping sauces, which some customers use for pizza, and
other items like chicken poppers.
After high-profile moves by Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. and
Panera Bread Co. to purify their menus, restaurant chains are under pressure to
go all-natural — and make sure consumers notice. Papa John's started posting
its ingredients online this year, shining a spotlight on its food.
But the push to remove artificial ingredients comes at a cost.
In addition to the $100 million in added expenses each year — the result of
using higher-priced natural ingredients — the shift has affected the taste of
some items, said John Schnatter, the company's founder and chief executive
officer.
WHY don't Drs. do anything about the Chemical poisons in food ???
Too good for revenue ?
"It's hard to remove some of these things and still get the
flavor and functionality you want," said Schnatter, the "Papa"
in the coy's name. "We gave up flavor on the ranch dressing because I
wanted to get the chemical out." Papa
John's latest push on menu transparency started after a food blogger criticized
the chain's ingredients in 2013. To track its progress, the company created an
internal color-coded "Clean Label Scorecard" that compares it to
Chipotle and Panera, two chains seen as standard-bearers for the natural-food
push.
Panera has spent the last year removing artificial additives
from its food and reformulating its salad dressings. Chipotle, meanwhile, has
eliminated genetically modified organisms from its ingredients. It also debuted
a marketing campaign that touts its use of simple, unprocessed ingredients.
Larger fast-food chains are getting into the act as well. Taco
Bell said last month it would eliminate unnatural ingredients, and McDonald's
has pledged to stop serving chicken raised with some antibiotics.
Papa John's is the third-largest pizza chain in the United
States by sales, trailing Pizza Hut and Domino's Pizza. Pizza Hut, owned by Yum
Brands Inc., said last month it would remove artificial colors and flavors from
its "nationally available" pizzas by the end of July. The chain
previously eliminated trans fats and MSG. The movement has spread to the packaged-food industry too.
General Mills said on Monday that it was removing artificial flavors and colors
from its full lineup of breakfast cereals.
Schnatter said his effort to clean up Papa John's menu has
nothing to do with moves by competitors. It all started back in 1996 after he
visited a factory in Kansas and didn't like how the sausage was being made, he
said. Over the years, Schnatter made changes like removing fillers from
the meat used for toppings and improving the pizza dough. The company also
previously pulled cellulose, an anti- caking agent, from its mozzarella cheese.
Each adjustment has boosted food expenses, he said. It costs more than $2
million just to serve pepperoni free of the preservatives BHA and BHT,
Schnatter said.
Papa John's, which has more than 4,600 restaurants worldwide,
has long marketed its menu under the tag line "better ingredients, better
pizza." Its pizza is generally more expensive than the other major chains,
according to Michael Halen, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence.
"Customers already give Papa John's credit for quality
ingredients, as shown by their willingness to pay a dollar or two more for
their pizzas," Halen said. Still, the bet on natural ingredients may not
be a "game changer" the way the switch to digital ordering was, he
said. Ten of the ingredients marked for elimination at Papa John's
will be gone by the end of this year, with the final four following by the end
of 2016, the company said. That will put the chain in a position that's hard
for competitors to match, Schnatter said.
"Everybody wants Papa John's quality, but they don't want
to take the time or spend the money to do it," he said. "They're
going to have to spend a bunch of money to get where we're at. And if they
don't, we'll let the customers make the decisions."
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