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In the past year, however, customers have kept spending in check by ordering only food or requesting only tap water, according to a study by The NPD Group. As sales of sodas and diet sodas have slipped, restaurants have responded by aggressively marketing other drinks, such as specialty coffees and smoothies. It's been a big part of McDonald's success in recent years; the chain introduced premium coffee drinks in 2009 and fruit smoothies the following year. It's no surprise that Burger King followed suit with its own coffee frappes and smoothies as part of its revamp earlier this year. Wendy's is also testing specialty coffees in select markets. At Taco Bell, customers can get a Fruitista Freeze, a frozen drink topped with fruit pieces, or Limeade Sparklers, which is lemon-lime soda and lime juice. "There's definitely a consumer trend of splurging on drinks," says Niccol of Taco Bell. In fact, "beverage only" trips to fast-food restaurants are increasing, according to The NPD Group. These trips are often for shakes, smoothies, slushy drinks and coffee. SKIMPIER MENUS Value menus aren't as meaty as they once were, either. When McDonald's first introduced its Dollar Menu a decade ago, for example, the flagship offering was the Big
'N Tasty, made with a quarter-pound beef patty. But as McDonald's and other fast-food chains pay more for beef, cheese and other ingredients, what customers can buy for just a buck isn't quite as filling. The Big 'N Tasty lasted on the Dollar Menu for about a year. McDonald's then added the Double Cheeseburger, which has smaller patties, to the lineup instead. About three years ago, McDonald's took the Double Cheeseburger off the Dollar Menu and replaced it with the McDouble, which has one slice of cheese, instead of two. As ingredient prices have risen, McDonald's in March introduced its "Extra Value Menu," where items cost closer to $2. That's where the two-cheese-slice Double Cheeseburger is now found. "What it boiled down to was our ability to offer our customers options that make sense for them, but also make sense for us," says Danya Proud, a spokeswoman for McDonald's. The changes may be why the Dollar Menu now makes up about 10 percent of McDonald's business, down from about 13 percent in earlier years.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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