Business Chick-fil-A’s First Meatless Chicken Sandwich Is Made With This Star Vegetable

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Chick-fil-A’s First Meatless Chicken Sandwich Is Made With This Star Vegetable

Meatless chicken can be made from a variety of bases, perhaps none more popular than cauliflower—which serves as a trusty vegan substitute for chicken wings every Super Bowl Sunday. This year, the humble cauliflower is pulling double-duty as meatless chicken in Chick-Fil-A’s first-ever vegetarian sandwich.

Starting on February 13, the major chicken chain will unveil the Chick-fil-A Cauliflower Sandwich, made with cauliflower that is marinated and breaded in the original Chick-fil-A signature seasoning (which contains milk and dairy), pressure-cooked and paired with two dill pickle chips and served between toasted buns.
“Cauliflower is the hero of our new sandwich, and it was inspired by our original Chick-fil-A Chicken Sandwich,” Leslie Neslage, director of menu and packaging at Chick-fil-A, said in a statement. “Guests told us they wanted to add more vegetables into their diets, and they wanted a plant-forward entrée that tasted uniquely Chick-fil-A.”

“Our new sandwich is made with the highest-quality ingredients and whole vegetables, and we hope it offers customers another reason to dine at Chick-fil-A,” Neslage said.
Next week, the new vegetarian sandwich will hit Chick-fil-A locations for a limited time in three test markets: Denver, CO; Charleston, SC; and North Carolina’s Greensboro-Triad region.

Making Chick-fil-A’s first meatless chicken sandwich​

Over the years, Chick-fil-A has acquired a reputation for many things but vegetarian food has not been one of them, until now.

The chicken chain invested heavily in the development of its new Chick-fil-A Cauliflower Sandwich which it says took nearly four years to perfect, meaning chefs and recipe testers worked throughout the pandemic to get the sandwich recipe right.

“We explored every corner of the plant-based space in search of the perfect centerpiece for our plant-forward entrée,” Stuart Tracy, culinary developer of the Chick-fil-A Cauliflower Sandwich, said in a statement. “Time and time again, we kept returning to cauliflower as the base of our sandwich.”
“After a significant amount of development, we knew we had a one-of-a-kind entrée; one that puts a delicious spin on what we’re known for—great tasting food with ingredients you can trust,” Tracy said.
The sandwich is in its test launch phase, during which time companies typically focus on gaining copious amounts of data before expanding the test or launching nationally. This means that while the current iteration of the Chick-fil-A Cauliflower Sandwich contains animal-derived ingredients the final version could change based on consumer feedback.

Cauliflower enters the chicken wars​

Chick-fil-A has been at war with Popeye’s for years, with each chain one-upping each other with a new chicken sandwich that they hope becomes all the rage. The casualties in this war are chickens, who are slaughtered in mind-boggling numbers on polluting factory farms to keep up with this charade.

Chick-fil-A’s exploration of meatless chicken options comes at a time when the pandemic continues to shed light on just how vulnerable the animal agriculture industry is to supply disruptions. Currently, the chicken industry is facing a historic egg shortage brought on by the longest avian flu outbreak on record. While plants like cauliflower are not impervious to supply chain disruptions, they are immune from contracting zoonotic diseases.

Other fast-food chains are slowly exploring the plant-based chicken space to future-proof their businesses, as well. Last year, Burger King also tested its first meatless chicken sandwich in partnership with Impossible Foods—a partnership that began with the launch of the Impossible Whopper in 2019.

Burger King tested the Original Chick’n Sandwich in Cincinnati, OH area locations in August. A meatless take of its classic chicken sandwich, this version was made with Impossible Foods’ new Impossible Chicken Patties made from Plants and could be ordered fully plant-based by omitting the mayonnaise.

Overseas, major chains are far more proactive in introducing plant-based chicken options, including Burger King. The chain has been testing plant-based options with its European supplier The Vegetarian Butcher at meatless pop-ups for two years. This has resulted in major menu updates, including vegan versions of classics such as The Long Chicken, in several markets. The fast-food chain also works with The Not Company in South America where its AI-perfected vegan chicken has been gracing the menu since last summer.

One of Chick-fil-A’s top competitors, KFC, has also gotten into vegan chicken. While it dabbled in adding Beyond Fried Chicken to its US menus for a limited time last year, the vegan chicken option did not stick around permanently. However, in the United Kingdom, KFC serves a vegan burger made with Quorn’s meatless chicken filet breaded in the Colonel’s famous 11 herbs and spices.
 
When are these faggots going to give this up? The only alternative the populace will accept is meat that is lab grown yet indistinguishable from the real thing and I just don't see that happening. All this vegetable trash is worse for you somehow and pure vomit. Imagine all the money being put into this being used for something actually productive. It's not like chickens are the least efficient livestock anyway so this is doubly stupid. But globohomo gonna globohomo.
 
What the hell is with this article? Chick-fil-A isn't doing a chickenless chicken sandwich nor are they pretending to. This isn't a fake meat, just cauliflower.

They actually honestly just trying do a vegetable thing for people who for whatever reason want veggies. Nothing to do with meat beyond meat also being served at the restaurant. It's even named with the main vegetable and saying nothing about copying an existing meat dish. Just like most good vegetarian and vegan foods, able to stand by themselves.
 
I'm not about to turn down some cauliflower tempura. In fake chicken sandwich form? Maybe once for novelty. What is it, 80-95% less protein than the normal chicken sandwich?
95% is about right. 1.5g vs 35g for a 3.5 Oz serving of each.

Just as an aside, Chick Fil A is probably my favorite fast food chain, but I've virtually stopped going because their chicken recipe is dead-easy and they sell their sauce at Kroger.

The trick is a milk + egg + pickle juice marinade for anywhere from 2-24 hours. That seems to give it its almost MSG-like umami flavor that you associate with sesame-chicken and chow mein noodles. From there, it's just a couple of seasoned flour dredges (scoring the chicken to get some more surface area), deep fry @ 350 in peanut oil until 150-155 internal, cheapo hamburger bun, and a couple of pickle slices.
Not every-day food, but the only thing it needs that isn't a pantry staple is the chicken itself. Will last a week in the fridge and re-crisping is just a quick 15 sec microwave to take the chill out and refrying in a tablespoon of oil (which is the same for any fried food gone soggy, btw).

We are now the Recipe Farms; don't @ me.
 
I don't mind vegetarian substitutes but chick-fil-a has to be the most overrated places to eat ever along with Chipotle. I unironically think Burger King had a better sandwich when they were doing the chiking thing or w/e homo name they had for it.
 
When are these faggots going to give this up? The only alternative the populace will accept is meat that is lab grown yet indistinguishable from the real thing and I just don't see that happening. All this vegetable trash is worse for you somehow and pure vomit. Imagine all the money being put into this being used for something actually productive. It's not like chickens are the least efficient livestock anyway so this is doubly stupid. But globohomo gonna globohomo.
It is fucking capitalism you dumb fuck.
"This is globohomo trying to turn me 5g gay!!!!!"

They are doing this becaus they are close to market saturation in the US.
Right now they have two options.
1. Open more stores and expand.
2. Change/Add to the menu.

Now they are doing both, but at the moment the best thing to get more revenue is to tap into a untapped market. Right now there is no real fast food "healthy" alternatives on the market that is good enough, but if you can create then you will have a entirely new market segment that you can profit from.

Now back you being scared of salad or what ever.
 
Fried cauliflower is great, you can bread and fry them like nuggets and dip in some bbq sauce.

What I would be concerned about is if this is actually just cauliflower. Most of these fake meat subs are full of other bullshit. I have tried just about every meat sub out there that I can get a hold of and none of them are very good besides Impossible, and thats still not anywhere close to real meat and is basically like eating a labs worth of chemicals.
 
Don't care. Not going to eat it. You could eat two sandwiches from Chick-Fil-A a day and still manage to lose weight. Especially the Chick-Fil-A sandwich that just has the pickles. It's my favorite and has been for years since I ate at a Chick-Fil-A in a local mall years ago. You could eat two of those a day and be fine. I don't know what they need a "healthy" option for. I am sure in order to make it taste life something they will load it up with salt and other seasonings. Cauliflower kind of sucks anyway and when its cooked it smells like some someone farted.

I guess this is for vegetarian and vegan faggots.
 
What the hell is with this article? Chick-fil-A isn't doing a chickenless chicken sandwich nor are they pretending to. This isn't a fake meat, just cauliflower.

They actually honestly just trying do a vegetable thing for people who for whatever reason want veggies. Nothing to do with meat beyond meat also being served at the restaurant. It's even named with the main vegetable and saying nothing about copying an existing meat dish. Just like most good vegetarian and vegan foods, able to stand by themselves.
Aye, it actually sounds nice. I'd have to try one to judge (which would be impossible, given the alphabet mafia got the only chick-fil-a in the UK shut down a couple of years back), but on the surface it sounds like a decent offering. Sort of like the old BK bean burger. The one they discontinued in favour of fake meat burgers that are massively worse for you in every way.
 
Meatless chicken can be made from a variety of bases
No it cannot be 'meatless chicken' because chicken is meat. What you are making is a vegetable sandwich. A man cannot be a woman and a vegetable cannot be a chicken.

I am sure like all other faux meat products this will have 2x your daily sodium intake.

Not hating on the concept just the execution and marketing. I make vegetable patties every now and then but I do pretend they are meat.
 
I'm open to trying any food unless it looks really disgusting. Problem is, every meat substitute I tried so far tastes like crap.
That's another problem, it doesn't even taste right. If it tasted great, well hot damn, you've taken strain off the chicken farms that somehow keep burning down. But it wont. This will fail.
 
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