Breakfast, Brunch Making Big Comebacks
  Here's an eye-opener: Even as the pandemic continues, breakfast visits to 
    restaurants rose significantly.
  In the three months ending in November, online and physical visits to restaurants 
    for breakfast increased 11% year over year, according to new data from The 
    NPD Group. Breakfast is now at roughly the same level as it was in Fall 
    2019, pre-pandemic.
  Meanwhile, morning snacking visits saw a 6% uptick in the last quarter.
  NPD noted that employees returning to workplaces no doubt aided restaurants 
    last fall. Lunch, for instance, improved by 4% in the reported period compared 
    to a year ago, when visits during that daypart were down 11%.
  Visits to dine-in at breakfast increased by 51% in September through November 
    in 2021, compared to the same period in 2020, when on-premises traffic was 
    down 55%, according to NPD research. Morning snacking also increased dine-in 
    visits by 51%, compared to the reported period last year when on-premises 
    traffic declined by 48%.
  "The increased mobility this fall contributed to year-over-year gains 
    at key restaurant dayparts," said David Portalatin, NPD's food industry 
    advisor, in a statement. "We're in a steady state for the next several 
    months, perhaps with a bump up or down here and there, but we expect to lag 
    pre-pandemic traffic levels through 2022 slightly."
  Investment Interest Up
  During a November webinar hosted by The Food Institute, industry leaders 
    noted top restaurant investment trends. Mark Leavitt, co-founder of Enlightened 
    Hospitality Investments, said he's "dying" to invest in restaurants 
    that focus on breakfast and brunch these days, due to one main factor:
  "In one labor shift you can get three or four turns," Leavitt said 
    of such restaurants. "At 7 in the morning you get the old [customers] 
    that are up, then at 8:30 or 9 o'clock you get people that are working. Then, 
    at 10 o'clock, you get the drinking crowd that's coming in."
  Meanwhile, Andrew K. Smith, the managing director of the Mercato Partners 
    Savory Fund, said the breakfast/brunch space is ripe for innovation and 
    investment in new concepts, like a "boozy brunch" during which alcohol 
    is sold. Food 
    Institute Focus
  
  Plant-Based Alternatives Push Further into Fast-Food
  Plant-based offerings continue to expand across restaurant menus, as major 
    players like Impossible Foods and Beyond Meat broaden their 
    partnerships with fast-food chains.
  McDonald's recently announced plans for a major U.S. expansion of 
    its plant-based burger the "McPlant" with Beyond, following in the 
    footsteps of Burger King's Impossible Whopper, which launched in 2019.
  The companies began testing the alternative patty in eight locations in November 
    and sold enough McPlants — as many as 70 per day at some locations — to warrant 
    an expansion of the trial, reported Reuters (Dec 14). Full 
    Story
  Notably, the locations were in small and mid-tier markets where one would 
    not expect to find a high volume of early adopter plant-based consumers, Mission: 
    Plant founder and managing director David Benzaquen told The Food Institute.
  "Increased availability of [the McPlant] not only helps McDonald's but 
    also normalizes the idea that eating plant-based meatless products can be 
    a part of everyone's life," said Benzaquen. "Just like the success 
    of both Coca-Cola and Pepsi in the "cola wars," this 
    expansion is sure to benefit McDonald's and Burger King."
  Target Consumers
  According to McDonald's website, the McPlant is topped with traditional veggies 
    and condiments — including lettuce, tomato, onions, and pickle — along with 
    dairy-based mayo and American cheese. The patty is also cooked on the same 
    grill as beef products, making the final burger neither vegan nor 100% vegetarian.
  Accordingly, the McPlant is expected to appeal more to flexitarian consumers, 
    Marie Molde, a registered dietician at Datassential, told The Food 
    Institute.
  "Flexitarians don't want to eliminate meat from their diets but simply 
    eat less meat and more plant-based foods," said Molde. "This represents 
    about 25% of the population and includes a consumer who may visit McDonald's 
    for a quarter-pounder one day, and a McPlant the next."
  The environmental benefits are also a key selling point.
  "A majority of consumers believe plant-based foods are better for the 
    planet than meat," said Molde. "Millennials especially believe that 
    reducing meat and increasing plant-based consumption is better for our environment."
  Meeting Expectations
  While the Beyond/McPlant trial performance drew parallels to the Impossible 
    Whopper, Molde views the rollout less as a competition and more a reflection 
    on consumers' growing expectation for more plant-based options on restaurant 
    menus.
  "Today, 71% of Americans have tried at least one type of plant-based 
    meat alternative and Impossible and Beyond have paved the way," said 
    Molde.
  However, for some consumers, there are nutritional differences that could 
    make one plant-based brand more attractive than the other.
  "Impossible was not gluten free until a reformulation in 2019, and Impossible 
    is still made with soy which can be an ingredient of concern for some," 
    said Molde.
  Categories to Watch
  Plant-based meat has come a long way since David Chang added the first Impossible 
    Burger to his menu at Momofuku in 2016, said Molde. Alternatives keep 
    popping up in new categories — from seafood to cured meats like pepperoni 
    and corned beef.
  Although consumers eat cold cut sandwiches much more often than burgers, 
    Benzaquen notes that plant-based innovation has largely overlooked deli meats.
  "In the U.S., there are nearly 24,000 Subway sandwich shops, 
    but only 21,000 locations of Burger King and McDonald's combined," said 
    Benzaquen. "I expect [plant-based cold cuts] to be a huge market in the 
    coming 12 to 24 months."
  Plant-based chicken has considerable potential as well, added Molde. "Chicken 
    is found on 95% of restaurant menus, is America's most consumed food — according 
    to Datassential's FLAVOR database — and is globally popular."
  KFC began piloting plant-based fried chicken with Beyond in 2019, 
    well ahead of the company's formation of a global strategic partnership with 
    Yum! Brands in early 2021. In October, Burger King became the first 
    quick-service restaurant to test Impossible Food's chicken nuggets.
  "I'm also excited about innovation with whole food plant-based foods, 
    like fruits, vegetables, seeds and legumes," said Molde. "These 
    are the items that consumers most want to increase in their diet and operators 
    are responding with innovations like mushroom shawarma and beet burgers." 
    Food 
    Institute Focus
  
  Is the Fast-Food Industry Ripe for Unionization?
  Multiple Starbucks locations have examined unionizing of late, which 
    begs the question: Is this a harbinger of things to come in the fast-food 
    industry?
  Fast-food workers have pushed for a $15 minimum wage, and the pandemic with 
    its attendant worker shortages intensified the pressure on restaurant owners. 
    So, with the headline-grabbing vote to unionize by Starbucks employees at 
    a Buffalo, New York, coffeehouse, will efforts to organize workers across 
    the sector take off?
  "We see unionizing as a fundamental and necessary way to participate 
    in Starbucks and its future," four workers wrote in a letter to CEO Kevin 
    Johnson.
  Key Issues at Play
  Starbucks Executive Vice President Rossann Williams wrote in a letter to 
    employees the company doesn't think unionization is the proper path, indicating 
    it would be a wedge between Starbucks and its employees. At the same time, 
    she said the company would bargain in good faith with the Buffalo store workers.
  Starbucks, which refers to its employees as "partners," already 
    offers more benefits and higher wages than other fast-food outlets and may 
    be a unique case. There are more than 15,000 locations in the U.S., 8,857 
    of which are corporately owned. The rest are owned by franchisees. By comparison, 
    McDonald's corporately owns fewer than 3,000 of the nearly 38,000 U.S. 
    restaurants, for example.
  "A high percentage of fast-food chains outlets are franchisee-owned. 
    Unionization on a larger scale will be possible only if restaurants are company-owned, 
    and today, more than 90% of popular brands restaurants are franchises," 
    Johnny Hartin of EffectsBusiness.com, which evaluates franchise opportunities, 
    told The Food Institute.
  Employees Hold the Hammer
  Nick Kalm, president of the public relations firm Reputation Partners, said 
    organizations like the Service Employees International Union have been targeting 
    the quick-serve industry, pushing for the $15 minimum wage and positioning 
    themselves to take advantage of situations where franchise owners have had 
    to cut back hours or close locations because of a dearth of workers.
  "Until recently, employers could rely on a combination of high employee 
    turnover, a never-ending supply of workers willing to work for minimum wage 
    (or a bit more) and, for the well-funded company, automation to keep employee 
    numbers down and the unions at bay," Kalm said. "What's different 
    now is that employees have been seeing how much their employers need them. 
    They are seeing employers struggling to fill roles – even with higher wages 
    that have reached and even exceeded the $15 an hour goal."
  The number of unionized workers in the United States has been declining for 
    decades but there was an uptick in membership last year and an increase in 
    job actions this year.
  A Long Time Coming
  Carla Diaz, a former food-service worker who founded the internet provider 
    evaluation firm, Broadband Search, said unionization has been a long 
    time coming and could lead to a more stable labor supply in the sector.
  "One of the main reasons many decide to leave [the food-service industry] 
    is because they aren't guaranteed a stable position or a stable salary. A 
    lot of servers and others depend on tips to get by, and in many cases, restaurants 
    often protect themselves and leave their employees with little protection.
  "There are two ways this can go: with larger chain restaurants giving 
    in as their employees unionize, or in which they will begin to set restrictions 
    for those who hope to join a union. With smaller family owned or casual diners 
    or restaurants, this will probably not be the case," she said. Food 
    Institute Focus
  
  Analysis: Four Top Consumer Delivery Trends from 2021
  Since the outset of the pandemic, foodservice delivery companies have become 
    a consumer staple. And while they simply offered a lifeline to hungry consumers 
    earlier in the pandemic, the industry has evolved in truly unique ways.
  With Lyft announcing its plans to join the foodservice delivery space 
    recently, let's examine which trends competitors DoorDash, Uber 
    Eats, and GrubHub witnessed in 2021.
  French Fries Reign Supreme
  On both DoorDash and Uber Eats, the top-ordered item of 2021 was French fries.
  Uber Eats also noted the popularity of the ubiquitous French fry, but with 
    a twist. Uber Eats noted orders of cheese fries rose 1,234% when compared 
    to pre-pandemic levels.
  DoorDash also reported increased purchases of these modified fries, with 
    cilantro lime fries (+341%), waffle fires (+178%), and garlic fries (+127%) 
    all jumping from the prior year.
  Regular French fries weren't left in the cold, though, with DoorDash reporting 
    orders of plain French fries rising 130%.
  Foodservice Delivery Turns to Grocery
  While DoorDash and Uber Eats both began as foodservice delivery services, 
    forays into the grocery delivery space seem to be paying off for both companies.
  Interestingly, both companies noted weekends were the most popular days to 
    order grocery delivery. Uber Eats said the 5-7 p.m. timeframe was most popular 
    on the weekends, while DoorDash said dinner time on Saturdays is the most 
    popular.
  Even GrubHub was looking to the grocery delivery vertical, highlighting a 
    partnership it made with Instacart to extend two months of Instacart Express 
    to existing GrubHub diners.
  Well, That's Convenient
  Grocery stores weren't the only retail sector to align with the delivery 
    trend, with pharmacy chains, convenience stores, and even floral shops getting 
    in on the action. Uber Eats noted partnerships with national operators like 
    Walgreens, CVS, and 7-Eleven, and FTD allowed folks to order everything from 
    Slurpees to COVID-19 antibody tests.
  DoorDash saw c-store orders focused on snacks and drinks, with chocolate 
    chip cookie dough ice cream, lemon-lime soda, mac and cheese bites, peanut 
    butter cups, and energy drinks constituting the top ordered items in the convenience 
    category.
  GrubHub reported year-over-year gains for the top five most ordered convenience 
    items on its platform, with 2% milk (+190%), toilet paper (+190%) and instant 
    ramen (+143%) posting strong growth from the 2020 reference period.
  Alcohol a Big Hit
  All three major delivery platforms boasted of increased alcohol deliveries 
    in 2021, with Tito's vodka an especially big hit with DoorDash and Uber Eats 
    customers.
  DoorDash and GrubHub also signaled out margaritas as a popular delivery choice, 
    with orders on the GrubHub platform rising 240% from the prior year.
  Cabernet Sauvignon was a winner in the wine category. Uber Eats noted Josh 
    Cellars' version was a hit with customers, while the variety made DoorDash's 
    top-three list and orders rose 106% on GrubHub. Food 
    Institute Focus
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