Foodservice

Foodservice is Our Future'

7-Eleven testing pizza, wings at 115 Dallas stores as it explores hot food opportunities
DALLAS -- 7-Eleven Inc. said Monday that it is expanding its hot foods program to add items such as pepperoni pizza and chicken wings to 115 Dallas-area stores, according to a report by The Dallas Morning News. The program is part of a nationwide rollout that is bringing ovens made by Carrollton's TurboChef Technologies to 1,400 7-Eleven stores this year.

7-Eleven has offered grilled hot dogs since the early 1980s, but company spokesperson Margaret Chabris told the newspaper that this marks the first widespread use of the high-speed TurboChef oven that combines [image-nocss] radiant heat, microwave and convection cooking technologies.

Stores with the new hot food program will be able to serve items such as four-cheese and pepperoni pizza (whole or by the slice), white-meat chicken tenders and three varieties of chicken wingsspicy, breaded; Asian; and barbecue, said the report.

For breakfast, stores chosen by the company to participate in the hot food program also will sell sausage, egg and cheese quesadillas and hash browns, the report added. Prices range from 79 cents for two hash browns to $9.99 for a large pizza.

The move marks a further escalation of 7-Eleven's move away from tobacco products and into food, the report said.

"Foodservice is our future," said Chabris, "We realized this in the 1990s with declining tobacco sales and rising tobacco regulation."

She said hot foodwhich began as a test in 2007 in Salt Lake Cityaccounts for 30% of the brand's food offerings, which also include fresh fruit, salads and sandwiches.

"Customers want speed, value and convenience, which is our niche," she added. "We see a big opportunity with hot foods."

For November and December, some stores will have a banner offering a whole pizza for $6.99. Starting next year, the company will have a menu board over the hot foods area inside the store.

Chabris said the company also is part of a 27-store test of fresh bananas wrapped and treated to double their "ripe life." 7-Eleven is working with Fresh Del Monte Produce to test the bananas, which are kept in special packaging that slows the ripening process and extends the green and yellow life of bananas for up to 5 days. (Click here for previous coverage.)

The test began Monday and will last about 60 days, said the report.

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