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Enero 10, 2011
Technomic finds consumers want clear value propositions, differentiation from casual-dining restaurants
For casual-dining concepts, which account for more than one third of total U.S. restaurant industry sales, the past two years have seen traditional and upscale casual restaurants battling soft same-store sales, as consumers traded down to lower priced fast-casual competitors and prepared more meals at home.From the archive

Enero 09, 2011
Amerikaans initiatief om het imago van aardappelen en friet te verbeteren
Tijdens de vorige week gehouden Potato Expo - het grootste aardappel congres in the Verenigde Staten - werd een nieuw initiatief gepresenteerd om het imago van aardappelen en friet te verbeteren.From the archive
Contenido Patrocinado
Contenido Patrocinado
Contenido Patrocinado

Diciembre 22, 2010
Top Hottest Menu Trends for 2011
The National Restaurant Association’s “What’s Hot” survey of more than 1,500 professional chefs—members of the American Culinary Federation (ACF)—reveals that local and hyper-local sourcing, healthy children’s meals, sustainable seafood, and gluten-free cuisine will be among the hottest trends on restaurant menus in 2011.From the archive

Diciembre 15, 2010
Canadian foodservice industry outpaces U.S.
Canada's foodservice industry is growing in terms of both unit counts and menu offerings. After a 1.2 percent decline in 2009, estimates indicate that Canadian foodservice has achieved a higher growth rate in 2010 than its U.S. counterpart.From the archive

Diciembre 15, 2010
Class Action Lawsuit Targets McDonald's Use of Toys to Market to Children
A mother of two says that McDonald’s uses toys as bait to induce her kids to clamor to go to McDonald’s and to develop a preference for nutritionally poor Happy Meals. With the help of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, today the mom, Monet Parham, is filing a class action lawsuit aimed at stopping McDonald’s use of toys to market directly to young children.From the archive

Noviembre 08, 2010
Yale study says fast food marketers targeting kids more than ever
A study from Yale University's Rudd Center for Food Policy &Obesity charges that fast-food companies are marketing to youth now more than ever -- increasingly targeting children as young as 2 years oldFrom the archive






