Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Happier Meal? McDonald's Nixing Some Unpalatable Ingredients

The Canadian Press, 02 Aug, 2016 12:27 PM
    NEW YORK — McDonald's, which is trying to shake its image for serving processed junk food, said Monday it's eliminating some unpalatable ingredients from its most popular menu items.
     
    That includes making Chicken McNuggets and other items without artificial preservatives, and removing high-fructose corn syrup from its burger buns. McDonald's did not immediately respond when asked about which specific preservatives are being removed.
     
    The changes come as the world's biggest burger chain fights to win back customers after three straight years of declining guest counts at its established U.S. locations. Major restaurant chains are scrambling to step up the image of their food as they face more competition from smaller rivals promising wholesome alternatives.
     
    "Why go to the position of trying to defend them, if the consumer is saying, I prefer not to have that particular ingredient in my food?" said Mike Andres, president of McDonald's U.S., during an event at the company's headquarters in Oak Brook, Illinois, about its "food journey."
     
    How meaningful the changes are to customers remains to be seen.
     
    Michael Jacobson, executive director for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, said the moves by McDonald's don't seem to address the big-picture problem with restaurant food — the overabundance of calories.
     
    For instance, he said swapping out high-fructose for sugar doesn't make burger buns any healthier.
     
    In the past year and a half, McDonald's has also switched to butter from margarine for its Egg McMuffins and added kale and spinach to its salads. Its rivals have made changes as well.
     
    Dunkin' Donuts, for instance, has promised to put more egg in its egg patty. Currently, the patty looks like a fried egg but is a composite of ingredients including egg whites, water, egg yolks and modified corn starch
     
     
    As part of its own push to remove artificial ingredients, Taco Bell has said it would switch to actual black pepper rather than "black pepper flavour." That's even as it continues trying to lure new diners with indulgent concoctions and neon-colored drinks.
     
    Subway has introduced a "rotisserie chicken" and "carved turkey" that have more texture and look more natural than its regular chicken strips and turkey. It's offering both versions to avoid alienating fans who might not want any changes.
     
    But convincing people it serves wholesome food is particularly important for McDonald's, which has long courted families with its Happy Meals.
     
    The company's sales in its flagship U.S. market have showed improvement, helped by the fanfare over the introduction of an all-day breakfast menu in October. In the most recent quarter, though, McDonald's said sales edged up just 1.8 per cent at established locations. That signalled that any excitement from all-day Egg McMuffins could already be losing steam.
     
    McDonald's had signalled that tweaks to its menu were in store, telling investors during a presentation in late 2014 that it was evaluating its cooking procedures and ingredients as part of its push to fix its struggling businesses.
     
    "We need to think about our ingredient labels as being much smaller," Andres said at the time.
     
    The company also said Monday it completed ahead-of-schedule its commitment to phase out chicken raised with antibiotics important to human medicine.
     
     
    Reporters at the media event Monday also posted images of new items like "breakfast bowls" the company is testing. And a McDonald's chef demonstrated making Egg McMuffins with freshly cracked eggs — a point the company has been trying to emphasize in advertising to convey the message that it serves real food.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    As More Canadians Survive Strokes, More Live With Stroke-induced Disabilities

    As More Canadians Survive Strokes, More Live With Stroke-induced Disabilities
    More people are surviving strokes — a good news story about what can be a devastating and even fatal attack on the brain.

    As More Canadians Survive Strokes, More Live With Stroke-induced Disabilities

    Diversify Your Diet To Stay Healthy

    Diversify Your Diet To Stay Healthy
    A loss of dietary diversity during the past 50 years could be a contributing factor to the rise in obesity, Type 2 diabetes, gastrointestinal problems and other diseases

    Diversify Your Diet To Stay Healthy

    Indian American Team Makes Gene-Editing Tool Simpler

    Indian American Team Makes Gene-Editing Tool Simpler
    A team of Indian American researchers has developed a user-friendly resource to make the powerful gene-editing tool more friendly.

    Indian American Team Makes Gene-Editing Tool Simpler

    Why Indians At Higher Risk Of Diabetes

    Compared to those in the developed world, middle classes in India and other developing countries are more susceptible to Type-2 diabetes, obesity and cardiovascular diseases, thanks to their undernourished ancestors, says a study.

    Why Indians At Higher Risk Of Diabetes

    Some SSRIs may raise birth defects risk when taken early in pregnancy: study

    Some SSRIs may raise birth defects risk when taken early in pregnancy: study
    TORONTO — A large new study by U.S. and Canadian researchers suggests the use of some anti-depressant drugs early in pregnancy may be linked to an increased risk of birth defects in the child.

    Some SSRIs may raise birth defects risk when taken early in pregnancy: study

    Why Women Live Longer Than Men?

    Why Women Live Longer Than Men?
    Explaining why women live longer than men across the world, vulnerability to heart disease is the biggest culprit behind a surge in higher death rates for men during the 20th century, says a study.

    Why Women Live Longer Than Men?