Disaster Ketchup shortage hits restaurants across the United States


If you're someone who appreciates the phrase "I put ketchup on my ketchup," you'll be interested — and perhaps slightly horrified — to hear about the latest supply chain shortage to hit the country.

As first reported by The Wall Street Journal, ketchup packets are apparently in short supply right now, and restaurants and fast-food chains are struggling to keep up with the demand.

Ketchup has always been a staple condiment for Americans, but since the pandemic forced many restaurants to ramp up their takeout game, the demand for those handy individual packets quickly skyrocketed. And the rules of supply and demand have led to a 13 percent increase in ketchup packet prices since 2020, according to the newspaper.

Fast-food chains have always handed out these disposable packets, but sit-down restaurants have traditionally placed bottles of ketchup on tables or poured it out into a bowl for customers. With both food service models now competing for packets, or sachets, as industry experts call them, the supply chain has been stretched to its limit.
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Packets of single serving Heinz Ketchup.

Kraft Heinz is, of course, the most well-known ketchup manufacturer, and the company makes up nearly 70 percent of the U.S. retail market for ketchup, The Wall Street Journal reported. With more people eating at home, ketchup bottle sales have also increased 15 percent in the last year, to over $1 billion in 2020.

As a result of the supply chain shortage, many restaurants are limiting the number of packets they give to customers or resorting to purchasing generic ketchup brands they normally don't use. Some popular fast-food chains like Long John Silver's and Texas Roadhouse have even had to reach out to secondary suppliers for the packets.

Steve Cornell, Kraft Heinz’s president of Enhancers, Specialty and Away from Home Business Unit, told TODAY Food the company is working hard to keep up the demand for those coveted ketchup packets as the takeout industry continues to explode.

“The unmatched consumer love for our iconic HEINZ brand as well as our longstanding partnership with the restaurant industry are two responsibilities we take very seriously – which was why we made strategic manufacturing investments at the start of the pandemic to keep up with the surge in demand for ketchup packets driven by the accelerated delivery and take-out trends," he wrote in an email statement.

Cornell also noted that Kraft Heinz has been looking into new packaging options to help evolve with its industry.

"At the same time, we also fast-tracked future-focused culinary and packaging innovations, as well as further manufacturing expansion plans, as we believe there is an enormous opportunity to grow our brands in the exciting foodservice industry,” he said.

Fans of the 150-year-old ketchup brand will recall that Kraft Heinz invented a single-serve ketchup tray called the Dip & Squeeze in 2011. In November 2020, the brand also launched a no-touch dispenser to help offer restaurants a sanitary way to allow customers to dispense their own condiments.

Looking ahead to the future, Cornell said the company is banking on its multiple new production lines, which he hopes will yield a 25 percent increase in production, amounting to 12 billion ketchup packets a year.

Ketchup packets are simply the latest shortage in the wake of the pandemic. It started with everyone running out to buy toilet paper at the beginning of lockdown. Meat shortages soon ran rampant and home bakers also bought up flour and yeast in droves.

Oddly enough, fridges were also in short supply, as were Mason jars since people began taking up pickling as a hobby. Even pepperoni wasn't spared, and the price of the popular pizza topping started rising over the summer.

If you can't find your beloved ketchup packets or bottles, know that making your own is always an option.
 
We are having a lot of supply chain issues all over the place. Not a great sign for the economy. I think we can all feel the cliff we're racing towards drawing near. We're like in the shadow of the nuke about to go off, neat!

Print more money Joe, that always works!

/doomsperging
 
We are having a lot of supply chain issues all over the place. Not a great sign for the economy. I think we can all feel the cliff we're racing towards drawing near. We're like in the shadow of the nuke about to go off, neat!

Print more money Joe, that always works!

/doomsperging
The quickest cure for woke is empty shelves and burning downtowns
 
We are having a lot of supply chain issues all over the place. Not a great sign for the economy. I think we can all feel the cliff we're racing towards drawing near. We're like in the shadow of the nuke about to go off, neat!

Print more money Joe, that always works!

/doomsperging
I can't wait to be allowed to legally kill people like the left is allowed to.

HYPE!
 
Weird, I was just in my local grocery chain and they still had tons of Ketchup of every variety from cheap shit to fancy hipster shit to imported shit. I'm not gonna lie, I don't remember there being ketchup packets at Texas Roadhouse last time I was there. Of course, maybe the whole COVID thing means they're using the packets instead of bottles and so the demand for the packets has exploded and it's not that there's a real shortages, it's a dumb COVID shortage that'll correct once we stop being tarded.

Now lumber and cardboard feed stock, there's a real shortage. Also COVID retardation related. Foam and PVC are also hitting shortages, but that's Texas related. That grid going down shut down a bunch of refineries and the knock on effects from that are enormous right now.
 
Not to PL too much but I'm working with an off-road fab shop to upgrade some parts on my new off-road toy (it's beautiful, wish I could share pics here but you spergs would doxx me just for spite)

Anyway I picked out 2 different lift kits that both ended up being on like an 8-10 week back order. Finally in frustration I was like, how about show me what kits are available and then I'll choose from those. Sheesh

Same for the shocks, although my second choice was available. yay me. I have a friend who works on trucks (the bigger work kind) and he's telling me it's been like that for big parts for at least six months and getting worse.

These days I don't even bother taking off the tinfoil hat.
 
Not to PL too much but I'm working with an off-road fab shop to upgrade some parts on my new off-road toy (it's beautiful, wish I could share pics here but you spergs would doxx me just for spite)

Anyway I picked out 2 different lift kits that both ended up being on like an 8-10 week back order. Finally in frustration I was like, how about show me what kits are available and then I'll choose from those. Sheesh

Same for the shocks, although my second choice was available. yay me. I have a friend who works on trucks (the bigger work kind) and he's telling me it's been like that for big parts for at least six months and getting worse.

These days I don't even bother taking off the tinfoil hat.
What's real interesting is that stainless steel orders are taking me about twice as long to get fulfilled at the moment at work. But that's true for almost everything at the moment. In theory, the plastics situation should stabilize by midsummer, but I don't know when wood and paper will be back to normal. Lumber is COVID work stoppages related, paperboard stock is Amazon related. I've had suppliers lose mills that their companies bought from as the mill went to solely supplying Amazon. It's nuts.
 
No, that's because black people don't know what the shrimp is supposed to come with so they always give you tartar sauce.
They offered that as an alternative and I just about Minecrafted them.

Not really, but they really were out of cocktail sauce and offered tartar sauce instead. Might as well have told me to smother it in mayo, the cunts.
 

If you're someone who appreciates the phrase "I put ketchup on my ketchup," you'll be interested — and perhaps slightly horrified — to hear about the latest supply chain shortage to hit the country.

As first reported by The Wall Street Journal, ketchup packets are apparently in short supply right now, and restaurants and fast-food chains are struggling to keep up with the demand.

Ketchup has always been a staple condiment for Americans, but since the pandemic forced many restaurants to ramp up their takeout game, the demand for those handy individual packets quickly skyrocketed. And the rules of supply and demand have led to a 13 percent increase in ketchup packet prices since 2020, according to the newspaper.

Fast-food chains have always handed out these disposable packets, but sit-down restaurants have traditionally placed bottles of ketchup on tables or poured it out into a bowl for customers. With both food service models now competing for packets, or sachets, as industry experts call them, the supply chain has been stretched to its limit.
View attachment 2068729
Packets of single serving Heinz Ketchup.

Kraft Heinz is, of course, the most well-known ketchup manufacturer, and the company makes up nearly 70 percent of the U.S. retail market for ketchup, The Wall Street Journal reported. With more people eating at home, ketchup bottle sales have also increased 15 percent in the last year, to over $1 billion in 2020.

As a result of the supply chain shortage, many restaurants are limiting the number of packets they give to customers or resorting to purchasing generic ketchup brands they normally don't use. Some popular fast-food chains like Long John Silver's and Texas Roadhouse have even had to reach out to secondary suppliers for the packets.

Steve Cornell, Kraft Heinz’s president of Enhancers, Specialty and Away from Home Business Unit, told TODAY Food the company is working hard to keep up the demand for those coveted ketchup packets as the takeout industry continues to explode.

“The unmatched consumer love for our iconic HEINZ brand as well as our longstanding partnership with the restaurant industry are two responsibilities we take very seriously – which was why we made strategic manufacturing investments at the start of the pandemic to keep up with the surge in demand for ketchup packets driven by the accelerated delivery and take-out trends," he wrote in an email statement.

Cornell also noted that Kraft Heinz has been looking into new packaging options to help evolve with its industry.

"At the same time, we also fast-tracked future-focused culinary and packaging innovations, as well as further manufacturing expansion plans, as we believe there is an enormous opportunity to grow our brands in the exciting foodservice industry,” he said.

Fans of the 150-year-old ketchup brand will recall that Kraft Heinz invented a single-serve ketchup tray called the Dip & Squeeze in 2011. In November 2020, the brand also launched a no-touch dispenser to help offer restaurants a sanitary way to allow customers to dispense their own condiments.

Looking ahead to the future, Cornell said the company is banking on its multiple new production lines, which he hopes will yield a 25 percent increase in production, amounting to 12 billion ketchup packets a year.

Ketchup packets are simply the latest shortage in the wake of the pandemic. It started with everyone running out to buy toilet paper at the beginning of lockdown. Meat shortages soon ran rampant and home bakers also bought up flour and yeast in droves.

Oddly enough, fridges were also in short supply, as were Mason jars since people began taking up pickling as a hobby. Even pepperoni wasn't spared, and the price of the popular pizza topping started rising over the summer.

If you can't find your beloved ketchup packets or bottles, know that making your own is always an option.
Not an Objectivist, but this world incresingly feels like the end of Atlas Shrugged, where the those in charge were too incompetent to provide basic services.
 
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