McDonald's customers in Amarillo, Texas will get to try a new side dish: sweet potato fries. The chain is testing them in restaurants that offer the customizable Create Your Taste menu.
If the trial goes well, we could see sweet potato fries at more McDonald's locations beyond Texas.
As part of its new strategy, McDonald's is taking a more regional approach to menu launches. "Sweet potatoes are most popular in the South, where per capita use was estimated to 5.7 pounds in 2001," according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, that's "more than twice that of the West (2.6 pounds), which consumes the fewest sweet potatoes."
Still there could be a reason the orange fries haven't already made it onto more fast food menus. McDonald's isn't the first chain to offer them. Burger King had the fries for a brief period in 2012, but they're off menus now.
Demand for the root vegetable simply may not be that high, and most people only cook sweet potatoes as a seasonal dish during the holidays. It hasn't been that popular for decades.
Per capita use of sweet potatoes peaked in 1920 at 29.5 pounds and declined to about 4.1 pounds per year in the 1980s, remaining about stable since then, according to the USDA.
"Further concentrated effort will be required to coax the highly nutritious sweet potato out of the holiday shadow and into everyday life," the agency wrote. McDonald's is giving it a shot.
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