To mark the launch on April Fool’s day, the burger giant released a
hidden-camera-style promo video showing the serving of plant-based
Whoppers instead of meat to customers who marvel that they cannot
tell the difference.
"We wanted to make sure we had something that lived up to the
expectations of the Whopper," said Burger King's North America
president, Christopher Finazzo. "We've done sort of a blind taste
test with our franchisees, with people in the office, with my
partners on the executive team, and virtually nobody can tell the
difference."
The Impossible Whopper comes at an extra cost - about a dollar more
than the beef patty Whopper. But Finazzo said research shows
consumers are willing to pay more for the plant-based burger.
Plant-based meat has been gaining popularity as more attention is
focused on the environmental hazards of industrial ranching. Finazzo
said his research shows customers mainly like it for the health
benefits. The Impossible Burger patty has zero cholesterol.
Impossible Foods, based in Redwood City, California, launched its
first faux meat patty over two years ago. A genetically modified
yeast creates the key ingredient, called heme, which makes the
patties appear to bleed and taste like real meat.
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Burger King is not the first to serve up a no-meat burger. Los
Angeles-based Beyond Meat in early January announced it was rolling
out its plant-based burger at fast-food chain Carl's Jr. Beyond Meat
counts actor Leonardo Di Caprio and Microsoft founder Bill Gates as
investors.
Finazzo said Burger King also researched Beyond Meat, but decided
that Impossible Food's offering was a better fit. "Around the taste,
around the brand recognition, around the price, all those things
were important factors in choosing Impossible," he said
Impossible Foods, which also counts Gates as an investor, tailored a
patty specifically for the Whopper, according to Chief Executive Pat
Brown.
“We're now in well over 6,000 restaurants. If the Burger King launch
is as successful as I expect it to be, and we go nationwide, that
will add more than 7,000 restaurants that serve the Impossible
Burger,” Brown said.
(Reporting by Jane Lanhee Lee; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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