Burger King explains Women belong in the kitchen tweet khou.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from khou.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Burger King is adding another meatless option to its wildly popular Impossible Burger, showing that it is committing more menu space to the growing demand for plant-based options. The chain recently announced it would be half plant-based by 2031, and while that’s a decade away, this move proves they will take steps toward that goal faster than anyone anticipated. The announcement comes at the same time as Mcdonald s has partnered with Beyond to introduce the McPlant, first in Canada, and then presumably in the US. These are the kinds of fast food wars we can get behind.
Consumers who are looking for easy meat-free dining options on-the-go can hope that the Chicken Royale comes to America soon after its initial introduction in the UK. The fast-food chain is continuing to test its meatless menu in England first, giving customers the chance to try it and another version of their popular burger: a new completely meat-free Rebel Whopper.
LONDON: Fast-food chain Burger King found itself on the griddle and getting burnt over an offensive tongue-in-cheek tweet on International Women’s Day that backfired massively on the burger brand. “Women belong in the kitchen,” the now-deleted tweet by Burger King UK read on Monday. While the thread was meant to reference the male-dominated UK kitchens and attempt to help