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Pilot program aims to turn old sauce packets into new recycled products

TerraCycle says the old plastic will be melted and turned into something new-- like a park bench.
PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) -- It may sound strange when you think about it, but those old take-out sauce packets can be put to good use. TerraCycle is partnering with Taco Bell and the Mercer County community to divert used hot sauce packets away from landfills.
TerraCycle says the old plastic will be melted and turned into something new-- like a park bench. "This recycling initiative empowers local Taco Bell locations and community spaces to promote sustainable initiatives in their own towns while encouraging residents to take an active role in helping to preserve the environment," said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle. "Our aim is to provide an opportunity for entire communities throughout New Jersey to collect waste and be part of the solution to keep these packets out of landfills and the environment."
And the packets don't just have to be from Taco Bell. The program is underway and ends on Earth Day, April 22. Consumers are encouraged to bring all brands and types of empty, used sauce packets to participating drop-off sites for recycling. Click here for a full list of participating locations.

Taco Bell New Partnership Drive New Electricity

Talk about getting ‘sauced’; Taco Bell in partnership with TerraCycle, and select Taco Bell locations, alongside several community spaces, all located throughout Mercer County are helping to divert used hot sauce packets away from landfills. With 8.2 billion Taco Bell hot sauce packets used each year in the U.S., this pilot program aims to give packets a spicier new life as a new recycled product. The team at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® wonders out loud, is this new electricity simply proactive marketing buzz? According to Foodservice Solutions®, Steven Johnson, “Brand relevance is in part driven with innovation in new food products in combination with new avenues of distribution all of which are the platform for the new electricity.”  That said, what are you waiting for? Johnson stated “that in my minds-eye the new electricity must be very efficient for the supply and includes such things as fresh foods, developing brands, unique urban clothing, grocerant positioning, fresh food messaging, autonomous delivery, cashier-less retail, plates, glasses, cash-less payments, digital hand-held marketing. All retailers to survive the next generation of retail must embrace the artificial intelligence revolution while simultaneously embracing fresh food that is portable, fresh, with differentiation that is familiar not different. 
Now, this program will be available through Earth Day (April 22, 2022), and consumers are encouraged to bring all brands and types of empty, used sauce packets to participating drop-off sites for recycling. Once collected, the waste will be sent to TerraCycle, where it will be cleaned and melted into hard plastic and remolded into new recycled products. To get classmates, friends, family members, and neighbors involved in the program, participants are encouraged to share online how they are recycling with #RecycleYourSauce.
  Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle, stated, “This recycling initiative empowers local Taco Bell locations and community spaces to promote sustainable initiatives in their own towns while encouraging residents to take an active role in helping to preserve the environment,” ... “Our aim is to provide an opportunity for entire communities throughout New Jersey to collect waste and be part of the solution to keep these packets out of landfills and the environment.” Foodservice Solutions® specializes in outsourced business development. We can help you identify, quantify and qualify additional food retail segment opportunities or a new menu product segment and brand and menu integration strategy.  Foodservice Solutions® of Tacoma WA is the global leader in the Grocerant niche visit us on our social media sites by clicking one of the following links: Facebook,  LinkedIn, or Twitter

How Liz Matthews is Marrying Craveability and Responsible Dining at Taco Bell

The chain's Chief Food Innovation Officer wants guests to feel great about their order, each and every time.
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"With thousands of restaurants, we understand our responsibility to make a positive environmental impact," Matthews says.
I may be biased, but I have one of the coolest jobs and greatest teams out there. I lead Taco Bell’s Food Innovation Team and the masterminds of our famous Test Kitchen. Whether you’re enjoying a limited time food offering or menu classic, my team plays an important role in bringing delicious food innovations to your plate. I grew up on Taco Bell and loved how I could access a whole menu of flavor with even just a dollar. But I actually went to California State University to study psychiatry. One semester I took a nutrition class. That was a pivotal moment where my interests shifted, and I ended up going to school for food science and nutrition. Later, I ended up in the manufacturing space. I knew I wanted to make my way back home to the LA area, and I found Taco Bell. For over two decades, I’ve been working to make sure our fans don’t have to choose between craveability and responsible dining. Everyone should feel great about their Taco Bell order, each and every time. Throughout last year, in particular, my team and I were busy making good on our continued commitments to our fans. We’re always listening to them. In 2021, we tested or launched everything from the Crispy Chicken Sandwich Taco to the Naked Chalupa with a Crispy Plant-Based Shell. We’re constantly developing unexpected menu items that everyone can enjoy, whether flexitarian or veggie-curious. Not only do we want our food to be unique and craveable, but we also want it to feed people’s lives with good. We’re on this exciting path that we call our Food For All journey, where we constantly evolve our menu to make sure we’re offering food that fits each and every lifestyle. Over the years, we’ve done everything from reducing sodium and removing artificial colors to sourcing only cage-free eggs and chicken raised without human antibiotics. I’m also proud of our work to leave a lighter footprint. With thousands of restaurants, we understand our responsibility to make a positive environmental impact. We made a global commitment to ensure all of our consumer-facing packaging is recyclable, compostable or reusable by 2025 … yes, all of it. We’ve launched a partnership with TerraCycle, we’re generating demand for unwanted recycled materials and we’re even repurposing used cooking oil in some restaurants. We have lots more in the pipeline for the rest of 2022. What was your first job? I’m from Los Angeles originally, and I started out working in restaurants when I was young. Starting as a hostess, I continued to take on a variety of in-restaurant roles over the years and work my way up. What’s your favorite menu item at Taco Bell?
  I grew up on the Burrito Supreme and it will forever remain my personal favorite. What’s your favorite cuisine aside from Taco Bell? Super hard question as I love it all.  I would say behind Mexican it would have to be Japanese … sushi, Udon, Ramen, Soba. Who inspires you as a leader? Right now, it’s this next generation. I have inspiring teenagers and they are nothing like I was when I was a teen! Young people across the world are teaching us all so much about the past, the present and different ways of thinking about the future—the views are positive, optimistic and not sugar coated. They see real big opportunities for change and are working in small and big ways towards real solutions. They are creating such momentum for our future. What’s the best piece of advice that other restaurant executives should hear? Always listen and observe. I am not the consumer or a team member that works in the restaurant anymore. Your team members have so much insight to the business and have amazing ideas. The consumers, the ones who love you and even the ones who don’t, can lead you to amazing ideas. Often people can't express what they want when it comes to food, so I love to observe people eating and creating moments with food. It can be very insightful. What are some of your interests outside of work? Food is honestly a major part of my personal life, too; I remember my key life memories through the food I ate during them. So, I love to try new foods and restaurants, and LA offers just the best! I love spending time with my family and friends and being active outdoors.

Taco Bell Launches Pilot Program in New Jersey to Recycle Sauce Packets

Be honest: how many packets of hot sauce, soy sauce, ketchup and the like do you have in a drawer? Probably a ton. For the hot sauce, now there’s something to do with the packets after you use them. Taco Bell is launching a pilot program in Mercer County to recycle used sauce packets. In partnership with TerraCycle, select Taco Bell locations, alongside several community spaces, all located throughout Mercer County are helping to divert used hot sauce packets away from landfills. With 8.2 billion Taco Bell hot sauce packets used each year in the U.S., this pilot program aims to give packets a spicier new life as a new recycled product. The packets don’t just have to be from Taco Bell, either. Now through Earth Day (April 22), participating Taco Bell locations will be accepting empty sauce packets regardless of brand or type. Once collected, the waste will be sent to TerraCycle, where it will be cleaned and melted into hard plastic and remolded into new recycled products “This recycling initiative empowers local Taco Bell® locations and community spaces to promote sustainable initiatives in their own towns while encouraging residents to take an active role in helping to preserve the environment,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle. “Our aim is to provide an opportunity for entire communities like Trenton to collect waste and be part of the solution to keep these packets out of landfills and the environment.” To search for the nearest participating location in Mercer County to recycle sauce packets, click here.

No need to trash (or horde) fast-food sauce packets: NJ recycling

Published: February 14, 2022
  Do you have fast-food condiment packets lying around the house? Don't throw them out. With a new pilot program in Mercer County starting, Taco Bell wants to make it just as convenient to recycle sauce packets as it is to take their food on the go. Now through Earth Day on April 22, consumers are encouraged to bring all brands and types of emptied sauce packets to participating drop-off sites in the county for recycling. Once collected, the waste will be sent to TerraCycle, where it will be cleaned and melted into hard plastic and remolded into recycled products. Participating locations include Taco Bell restaurants, which will take empty condiment package from any brand or other restaurant as long as they are empty. TerraCycle will recycle the used packets and create a picnic table to be donated to a park in Mercer County. To find a participating Taco Bell location or another local drop-off site, go to https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/pages/taco-bell-pilot.

Taco Bell launches pilot program in New Jersey to recycle sauce packets

Published: February 14, 2022 Be honest: how many packets of hot sauce, soy sauce, ketchup and the like do you have in a drawer? Probably a ton. For the hot sauce, now there’s something to do with the packets after you use them. Taco Bell is launching a pilot program in Mercer County to recycle used sauce packets. In partnership with TerraCycle, select Taco Bell locations, alongside several community spaces, all located throughout Mercer County are helping to divert used hot sauce packets away from landfills. With 8.2 billion Taco Bell hot sauce packets used each year in the U.S., this pilot program aims to give packets a spicier new life as a new recycled product. The packets don’t just have to be from Taco Bell, either. Now through Earth Day (April 22), participating Taco Bell locations will be accepting empty sauce packets regardless of brand or type. Once collected, the waste will be sent to TerraCycle, where it will be cleaned and melted into hard plastic and remolded into new recycled products “This recycling initiative empowers local Taco Bell® locations and community spaces to promote sustainable initiatives in their own towns while encouraging residents to take an active role in helping to preserve the environment,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle. “Our aim is to provide an opportunity for entire communities like Trenton to collect waste and be part of the solution to keep these packets out of landfills and the environment.” To search for the nearest participating location in Mercer County to recycle sauce packets, click here. Opinions expressed in the post above are those of New Jersey 101.5 talk show host Bill Doyle only. You can now listen to Deminski & Doyle — On Demand! Hear New Jersey’s favorite afternoon radio show any day of the week. Download the Deminski & Doyle show wherever you get podcasts, on our free app, or listen right now:

TerraCycle & Taco Bell Partner to Keep Hot Sauce Packets Away from Landfills

image.png A new recycling initiative in partnership with TerraCycle, select Taco Bell® locations, alongside several community spaces all located throughout Mercer County, including Trenton’s 590 S Broad Street Taco Bell location, are helping to divert used hot sauce packets away from landfills. “This recycling initiative empowers local Taco Bell® locations and community spaces to promote sustainable initiatives in their own towns while encouraging residents to take an active role in helping to preserve the environment,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle. “Our aim is to provide an opportunity for entire communities like Trenton to collect waste and be part of the solution to keep these packets out of landfills and the environment.” With 8.2 billion Taco Bell hot sauce packets used each year in the U.S., this pilot program aims to give packets a spicier new life as a new recycled product. “Through this recycling initiative, we seek to empower local communities to take action to keep empty sauce packets out of landfills and the environment, ensuring the waste is given a second life. At the end of the program, the collected sauce packet material will be recycled into picnic tables to be donated to local parks throughout Mercer County,” said Zachary Dominitz, TerraCycle’s Senior Vice President of Account Management. This program will be available through Earth Day (April 22, 2022), and consumers are encouraged to bring all brands and types of empty, used sauce packets to participating drop-off sites for recycling. Once collected, the waste will be sent to TerraCycle, where it will be cleaned and melted into hard plastic and remolded into new recycled products. To get classmates, friends, family members, and neighbors involved in the program, participants are encouraged to share online how they are recycling with #RecycleYourSauce. “By partnering with TerraCycle, we have found a unique way to extend the life cycle of Taco Bell’s hot sauce packets and increase recycling in our restaurants. We’re aiming to improve recycling rates through education and engagement, so this partnership is giving our fans the knowledge and access to recycle the hot sauce packets they love,” said Missy Schaaphok, Taco Bell’s Director of Global Nutrition & Sustainability. To search for the nearest participating location in Mercer County to recycle sauce packets, visit https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/pages/taco-bell-pilot-locations.

Taco Bell Launches Recycling Campaign for Signature Hot Sauce Packets

Taco Bell’s disposable, bite-sized hot sauce packages represent one of the fast-food chain’s most iconic symbols. While recognizable, these packets also amount to loads of waste every day, some of it ending up in our oceans. So Taco Bell is striving for a more sustainable solution. The company just announced plans to curb its hot sauce waste problem, which amounts to an estimated 8.2 billion single-use packets ending up in landfills per year. Recently, the vegan-friendly fast-food chain announced that it would be partnering with recycling leader TerraCycle to prevent this excessive waste and ensure that the signature packets get recycled. “As simple as it sounds, it’s important to remember to first reduce our consumption habits, then reuse products wherever possible, and then recycle,” Taco Bell’s Director of Global Nutrition & Sustainability Missy Schaaphok said. “We’re excited that TerraCycle has provided a way for us to extend the life cycle of our iconic sauce packets as we reevaluate the rest of our packaging suite.” The Mexican-inspired chain uses flexible firm materials to create the iconic hot sauce packages, allowing the packets to be easily reused and reformed into something else. TerraCycle will work with Taco bell to recycle the hot sauce packets nationwide, hoping to set a precedent for the entire fast-food industry. The move will mark one of the first times a major fast-food corporation has teamed up with a recycling campaign. Customer involvement will be critical for the recycling campaign so Taco Bell is increasing its advertising to promote this sustainable initiative. The company is currently setting up advertisements at its in-store cashiers and drive-thrus to encourage its patrons to recycle the sauce packets when finished with their Taco Bell meals. The customers will need to collect the finished packets, set up an account with TerraCycle, and then ship them to the company where the used packets will be melted into plastic for recycled material-based products. “Since our founding, TerraCycle has made it our mission to ‘Eliminate the Idea of Waste’ and provide solutions for items that are not traditionally recyclable curbside,” TerraCycle CEO and Founder Tom Szaky said. “This first-of-its-kind recycling program not only highlights the forward-thinking nature of Taco Bell but also marks a huge step forward for the quick service industry on its journey towards more sustainable business practices.” Taco Bell launched a sustainability initiative that promised the company would replace all of its consumer-facing packagings with completely reusable, recyclable, or compostable alternatives by 2025. The fast-food chain is recently taking leaps in sustainability measures, leading the industry toward more environmentally-conscious practices. Beyond the recent recycling campaign, Taco Bell has led the fast-food industry in plant-based options for decades. The company’s menu is notably vegan and vegetarian-friendly, allowing customers to substitute animal products out of most of the menu. Now, Taco Bell is enhancing its plant-based menu to bring consumers more options that extend beyond the iconic customizable menu. Earlier this year, the company’s parent company, Yum! Brands, announced a partnership with Beyond Meat. The partnership is expected to introduce plant-based protein to locations nationwide. In April, Taco officially began testing Beyond Meat at select locations in Southern California. The inaugural plant-based protein gave consumers the option to not just opt for beans, but to eat familiar favorites with a fully plant-based protein alternative. The company rolled out a limited edition Cravetarian Taco complete with only plant-based ingredients. The plant-based innovation continued when the company debuted its first vegan Chalupa shell. In June, Taco Bell released the Naked Chalupa with a Crispy Plant-Based Shell at one location in Irvine, California. The company’s test kitchen spent months developing a plant-based chicken that would bring its customers the classic chalupa menu staple without any of the animal products typically involved. “At Taco Bell, we’re pushing the limits of what people have known vegetarian and vegan items to look like within the quick-service restaurant industry,” Missy Schaaphok told VegNews this summer. “No matter one’s lifestyle, everyone should have access to delicious and crabapple food, whether that’s in the shape of our iconic Chalupa shell or in a way that we have yet to introduce.” For now, check out what is vegan at Taco Bell locations nationwide, including what is not on the menu, with The Beet’guide to eating plant-based at the fast-food chain.

TACO BELL’S NEW RECYCLING PROGRAM AIMS TO KEEP 8.2 BILLION HOT SAUCE PACKETS OUT OF LANDFILLS

Taco Bell’s new program with TerraCycle to keep hot sauce packets out of landfills is one step toward its goal of making its packaging recyclable, compostable, or reusable by 2025.

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Taco Bell’s hot sauce packets are coveted condiments that have been used as part of marriage proposals and other creative ways over the years. However, the truth is that 8.2 billion of these single-use packets end up in landfills every year—a fact that Taco Bell is aiming to change drastically with a new recycling program. Launched in partnership with recycling leader TerraCycle, the program will turn the hot sauce packets—which are made with flexible film materials—into something new. These single-use items are notoriously tough to recycle en masse and the success of Taco Bell’s new program could set a precedent for the recycling of sauce packets across the fast-food industry. “As simple as it sounds, it’s important to remember to first reduce our consumption habits, then reuse products wherever possible, and then recycle,” Missy Schaaphok, Taco Bell’s Director of Global Nutrition & Sustainability, said. “We’re excited that TerraCycle has provided a way for us to extend the life cycle of our iconic sauce packets as we reevaluate the rest of our packaging suite.” VegNews.TacoBellHotSauce2 Taco Bell is heavily advertising the program in-store and at its drive-thrus—which currently account for 75 percent of the chain’s transactions. Customers will be pivotal in helping the hot sauce program succeed and are encouraged to collect packets, create an account with TerraCycle, and send them to the company, which will then melt the single-use packets into hard plastic that will be turned into secondary items. “Since our founding, TerraCycle has made it our mission to ‘Eliminate the Idea of Waste’ and provide solutions for items that are not traditionally recyclable curbside,” TerraCycle CEO and Founder Tom Szaky said. “This first-of-its-kind recycling program not only highlights the forward-thinking nature of Taco Bell, but also marks a huge step forward for the quick service industry on its journey towards more sustainable business practices.” VegNews.TacoBellHotSauce4 Taco Bell’s hot sauce packets recycling program is one step toward its goal of making all of its consumer-facing packaging recyclable, compostable, or reusable by 2025.

Taco Bell gets into sustainable plant-based innovation

Taco Bell’s Mild, Hot, Fire, Diablo, and Breakfast Salsa hot sauces are all vegan and implementing a way to recycle them is helping establish Taco Bell as a leader in sustainability in the fast-food sector. When it comes to cutting its carbon footprint in other ways, Taco Bell—which is already known for its myriad customizable vegan options—is working on plant-based menu innovations. While Taco Bell previously leaned on its beans as its plant-based protein offering, the chain officially tested vegan meat—a first for its US outposts—at one location in California in April. That store location offered the limited-time The Craveterian Taco, a meatless version of its Crunchy Taco Supreme stuffed with a “boldly seasoned plant-based protein,” shredded cheddar cheese, lettuce, diced tomatoes, and sour cream, and served in a crunchy corn shell. VegNews.TacoBellVeganMeat Taco Bell followed this test with another super limited launch of the The Naked Chalupa with a Crispy Plant-Based Shell at another single California location in June. Created as a meatless version of its Naked Chalupa, this item was a shell made from vegan chicken filled with lettuce, cheddar cheese, diced tomatoes, and avocado ranch sauce. Taco Bell used both of these inconsequential releases to showcase what it could do in the plant-based space on a small scale. However, the chain is committed to plant-based innovation on a larger scale. Taco Bell is owned by Yum! Brands—the parent company of Pizza Hut and KFC— which is in a multi-year partnership with vegan brand Beyond Meat to develop a menu item that it describes as “not quite yet seen in the industry.” The partnership has already resulted in limited launches at Pizza Hut (where Beyond Pepperoni launched in five cities in August) and KFC (where Beyond Fried Chicken was tested in 2019). At Taco Bell, the anticipated Beyond Meat menu launch will occur within the next year.
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Finally, There's a Way to Recycle Your Drawer Full of Old Taco Bell Sauce Packets

Whether you go to Taco Bell for the tacos, burritos, or Crunchwrap Supreme, you're likely getting a few hot sauce packets with your order. The fast-food chain's spicy condiments—which range in heat levels from mild to diablo—are a signature part of the brand, but they're also a major source of single-use plastic. Each year, more than 8 billion discarded Taco Bell sauce packets end up in landfills. To tackle this problem, the company is launching a program to recycle the tiny packages at the bottom of your bag. NPR reports that the new sustainability initiative is a collaboration between Taco Bell and the recycling firm TerraCycle. Once customers have squeezed their preferred sauce over their food, they're encouraged to save the used packets in a cardboard box instead of tossing them in the trash. As the container starts filling up, they can create an account with TerraCycle and print a free shipping label to stick to the box. The customer then ships the package via UPS, and TerraCycle handles converting the plastic into raw materials for reuse. The project is Taco Bell's attempt to make its packaging practices a little gentler on the environment. Originally, the company wanted to set up packet collection boxes in stores, but with the majority of its meals now being ordered for takeout or delivery, giving customers the option to mail their recyclables makes more sense. The program may not be worth it for the occasional Taco Bell patron, but it could be appealing to anyone with a drawer full of fire hot sauce packets at home. You can learn more about the initiative and sign up to take part here. Hopefully this effort is more successful than these discontinued menu items from Taco Bell's history.