Red alert as US faces ketchup packet shortage

Heinz is still the most widely sold brand of ketchup

Washington (AFP) - Americans may soon have to forgo ketchup on their fries and burgers, with manufacturers struggling to keep up with demand for single-use packets as restaurants heavily turn to take-out service during the pandemic. 

Heinz, whose iconic tomato condiment remains the most widely sold, faced a "surge in demand for ketchup packets driven by the accelerated delivery and take-out trends," Kraft Heinz president Steve Cornell told AFP, confirming a report in the Wall Street Journal. 

The individual packets, which often accompany delivery orders, over the last year have effectively replaced the use of the classic glass or plastic bottles frequently seen on restaurant tables -- even in dine-in environments, where customers are wary of touching communal items. 

The ketchup giant has already made adjustments to their production processes in order to keep up with the new situation. 

Even so, "demand was greater than supply," the company told AFP in an email. 

In response to that demand, Kraft Heinz said it has added multiple new production lines in its factories which should allow the company to increase manufacturing by 25 percent -- to total 12 billion ketchup sachets produced in a year. 

They have also developed a "no-touch dispenser" for restaurant dine-in service. 

Ketchup packet prices have risen 13 percent since January 2020, according to the Wall Street Journal, citing business services platform Plate IQ. 

In the meantime, restaurants have had to find a way to avoid the cardinal sin of serving fries without their classic red companion. 

"How can we serve French fries without Heinz ketchup?" owner of the Denver, Colorado restaurant Blake Street Tavern Chris Fuselier worried, according to the Journal. 

He asked servers to apologize to customers after he had to make the switch to a generic brand. 

© Agence France-Presse