McDonald’s New Meat-Free Burger in Canada Is All About the Veggies

mcveggie canada
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McDonald’s Canada is trialling the McVeggie, featuring a patty that ditches plant-based meat for vegetables.

After the Beyond Burger failure in Canada, McDonald’s is banking on vegetables for its latest meat-free main.

The Golden Arches is testing the McVeggie at 37 locations in British Columbia, Ontario and New Brunswick until April 14, gathering feedback from diners to inform a potential national launch.

It comes six years after the fast-food chain introduced the P.L.T. (Plant, Lettuce, Tomato) sandwich in Canada, featuring a Beyond Burger. The patty was tested in September 2019, before a wider 12-week trial in early 2020 – but it failed to break through and was eventually discontinued.

Now, McDonald’s is hoping that a vegetable-forward burger will capture consumers who don’t eat meat or are looking to cut back – two in five (39%) of Canadians say they’re eating less red meat, and another quarter would be willing to do so.

McDonald’s ‘uniquely Canadian’ meat-free burger

mcdonald's mcveggie burger
Courtesy: McDonald’s Canada/Green Queen

If you’ve ever been to a McDonald’s store in India, Brazil, Australia or New Zealand (among other places), you probably know that the McVeggie has been around for a long time.

Each is distinctly unique to its local market, and the Canadian McVeggie is no different. The breaded, deep-fried patty includes a blend of vegetables like soybeans, carrots, green beans, zucchini, peas, broccoli and corn, mixed with seasonings and topped with lettuce and a mayo-style sauce.

The latter contains eggs, so the McVeggie isn’t vegan – this was the case with the P.L.T. too, which came with mayo and cheese.

The McVeggie is available in a spicy habanero variant, which swaps the mayo-based sauce for a creamy habanero spread currently used in the Spicy McCrispy burger (this also contains egg).

“While our guests may have tried similar sandwiches at McDonald’s globally, our McVeggie is uniquely Canadian,” said Jeff Anderson, senior manager of culinary innovation at McDonald’s Canada. “We’re always looking for new opportunities to innovate and build on our menu, and the McVeggie will give even more guests the opportunity to enjoy that delicious McDonald’s flavour Canadians know and love.”

McDonald’s Canada CMO Francesca Cardarelli added: “We know more people in Canada than ever before are looking for new flavours and for variety on our menus. Our goal is to continue to offer new and exciting choices to meet these needs. And the McVeggie does just that.”

Can the McVeggie help McDonald’s attract meat reducers?

mcplant canada
Courtesy: McDonald’s Canada

The launch of the McVeggie stemmed from McDonald’s internal research, which revealed that around 35% of Canadians have food limitations – whether due to an allergy or personal preference – and about half of the time, it’s these consumers who decide where the group they’re dining with go to eat.

“The market is evolving and we’re listening to what guests are telling us,” Anderson told the Toronto Star. “So you’ll see this is a veggie-first patty. It’s one of the things we’re getting to learn. What we found from the McDonald’s consumer is that they might not be able to come to us for religious reasons or cultural reasons, and we’re looking at something that fits within that.”

Cardarelli told The Canadian Press that the Beyond Meat burger “wasn’t quite what consumers are looking for”, echoing comments from McDonald’s US president Joe Erlinger last summer.

The American executive had said the McPlant – as the Beyond Meat sandwich is known outside Canada – was “not successful” in the markets it was tested in, and that there were no plans on bringing it back. Experts, however, have called it an issue of “marketing malpractice”, rather than a lack of consumer demand.

This can be evidenced in Europe, where the McPlant has shone. When it was launched in the UK and Ireland in 2022, it was so popular, that McDonald’s introduced a Double McPlant months later. Successful trials in Germany and the Netherlands also led to a nationwide rollout, with the latter adding four new vegan products in 2023 (including a McPlant variant).

That said, meat alternatives are still low on the priority list for Canadians, 60% of whom don’t consume these products; though with more consumers looking to reduce red meat, and McDonald’s Canada receiving an F grade in a ranking of vegan-friendly restaurant chain menus, veggie burgers may be a shrewd move.

“As this is our first test of the McVeggie, we’re using this opportunity to gather insights and guests’ feedback so we can continue delivering on our commitment to serving great tasting, quality food we know Canadians will love and enjoy,” said Cardarelli.

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