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Countin' Calories: Panera Bread restaurants to list calories next to items on menu

Countin' Calories: Panera Bread restaurants to list calories next to items on menu

Credit: AP Photo

Panera says it will be the first nationwide chain to voluntarily post calorie information at all of its company-owned restaurants.


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Panera Bread customers around the country soon will be able to tally calories for their smokehouse turkey panini and broccoli cheddar soup with just a glance at the menu board.

Panera announced yesterday that it will be the first nationwide chain to voluntarily post calorie information at all of its company-owned restaurants. The move is notable in an industry that has historically opposed requirements that chain operations post calorie counts.

But the landscape is changing as local laws mandating nutritional disclosure become more common and Congress considers a nationwide mandate. This is only one in a wave of changes that consumers can expect to see on chain restaurant menus in coming years.

Panera officials said the possibility of wider mandates played a role in the move. But they also were pleased with how their customers reacted at Paneras that already advertise the fact that the chain's Asian sesame chicken salad has 410 calories, compared with the 680 in the Napa almond chicken salad sandwich on sesame semolina.

"It puts everything out in the open, obviously," said Scott Davis, the company's chief concept officer. "So when you look at making a choice between a soup with 100 calories and a sandwich with 300 or 400 calories, it puts it pretty clearly what's in your best interest."

Calorie counts will be posted by March 24 at all 585 company-owned stores, including Saint Louis Bread Co. and Paradise Bakery & Cafe stores. Panera expects its franchisees to eventually post them, which would cover all 1,380 stores. Employees at the Panera stores in Winston-Salem, which are franchises, said they weren't sure whether the local restaurants would follow suit anytime soon.

That schedule puts Panera ahead of Yum Brands Inc. -- parent of KFC, Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, Long John Silver's and A&W All-American Food -- which committed in 2008 to place calorie counts on menu boards at corporate-owned restaurants nationwide by Jan. 1, 2011. Yum senior vice president Jonathan Blum said they are testing their menu boards and are on target to make good on the commitment at more than 3,200 restaurants.

Panera and Yum, like most national chains, have already been forced to display nutritional information in some cities as local disclosure laws kick in.

New York City health officials looking for a new way to fight obesity began requiring chain restaurants to post calorie counts for the likes of burgers, pizza and doughnuts in 2008. Similar laws have since been approved in more than a dozen places, including Philadelphia and California. Congress is considering a national measure as part of health-care legislation.

Margo Wootan, the director of nutrition policy at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, said that it's great for chains to voluntarily provide calorie counts to customers.

Researchers at the Stanford Graduate School of Business found that calorie postings in New York City Starbucks led to a 6 percent reduction in calories per transaction.

Panera's Davis said that buying patterns haven't changed much in the 147 outlets that already post calorie counts.

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