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Cracker Barrel revamps menu with lighter dishesCracker Barrel revamps menu with lighter dishes

Wholesome Fixin’s line is chain’s largest menu rollout in eight years

Bret Thorn, Senior Food Editor

August 26, 2013

4 Min Read
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Cracker Barrel introduced a line of better-for-you items on Monday in its largest menu rollout in eight years.

The Wholesome Fixin’s menu is a line of eight new items and several side dishes, all with fewer than 600 calories.

The new line of lighter dishes is in part a response to guests’ observations that the restaurant’s menu was “a bit heavy or rich,” said Chris Ciavarra, Cracker Barrel’s senior vice president of marketing. “This is a long-term play,” he added, noting that, although customers are currently satisfied with the chain’s offerings, Cracker Barrel wants to make sure that the menu remains relevant.

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The company surveyed more than 2,000 of its existing customers as part of the menu’s development process, which started in January 2012.

During the process, Bill Kintzler, the company’s director of product development, came up with between 80 and 90 new menu items that were eventually narrowed down for market tests in about 50 restaurants.

Guests in the test markets were surveyed before and after the introduction of the Wholesome Fixin’s items, and they scored the menu higher in regard to variety and healthfulness after the new items were introduced.

Multigrain French Toast

The new breakfast dishes all have fewer than 550 calories. They are:

• Good Morning Breakfast: scrambled Egg Beaters, turkey bacon, sliced tomatoes, cheese grits, and a fruit selection that will change seasonally, for $7.19.

• Multigrain French Toast: bread dipped in egg, baked and topped with seasonally changing fruit and honey citrus yogurt, for $6.59. The dish is made with bread that replaces the low-carbohydrate bread that the chain introduced 9 or 10 years ago.

•Fresh Fruit and Yogurt Parfait: a mason jar layered with yogurt, strawberries and raspberries and topped with the chain’s own granola that contains almonds, dried cranberries and cinnamon. The breakfast also includes Egg Beaters and turkey bacon for  $6.99.

• Egg & Cheese Sliders: whole-wheat flatbread, seared on a grill and topped with mayonnaise, tomato, eggs and Colby cheese, served with seasonal fresh fruit for $5.69.

Buttermilk Oven-fried Chicken Breast

New items on the lunch and dinner menu, which have fewer than 600 calories, are:

• Wholesome Fixin’s sides: a cucumber-tomato-onion salad; a mixed green side salad with country pepper vinaigrette; sweet whole baby carrots; fresh seasonal fruit; country green beans; whole kernel corn; cheese grits; a baked sweet potato; and brown rice pilaf. The sweet potato and brown rice pilaf were added to the menu last fall, Kintzler said.

• Buttermilk Oven-fried Chicken Breast: a 5-ounce breast dipped in a combination of buttermilk and Cracker Barrel’s Vidalia onion dressing. The chicken is coated in seasoned cornflake crumbs and served with a steamed vegetable — either lightly seasoned, steamed broccoli or a mixed-vegetable blend of broccoli, cauliflower and carrots — and a choice of a Wholesome Fixin’s side for $7.99.

• Spice-rubbed Pork Chop: a seared pork chop that has been rubbed with a seasoning that includes garlic and smoked paprika, and then topped with a Creole marmalade made with Dijon mustard and orange marmalade. It’s served with a steamed vegetable and a choice of a Wholesome Fixin’s side for $8.49.

Spice-rubbed Pork Chop

• Pepper Grilled Sirloin: 8-ounce USDA choice top sirloin coated with cracked black, pink and green peppercorns, served with a steamed vegetable and a choice of a Wholesome Fixin’s side for $10.49.

• Pecan Crusted Catfish: a farm-raised catfish fillet, grilled and topped with Creole marmalade, seasoned breadcrumbs with parsley, and pecan pieces for $8.69.

Already on the menu, but being folded into the new lighter line, is a grilled chicken and fresh vegetable salad. It’s a bowl of iceberg lettuce, romaine and spring mix topped with grilled chicken tenderloin, sliced tomatoes, whole grape tomatoes, sweet corn relish, country pepper vinaigrette and a cucumber-onion salad. The item is currently priced in the mid-$8 range, but Ciavarra said the chain plans to raise its price shortly soon.

Cracker Barrel will eventually support the new line with a marketing program meant to help change customers’ ideas of when they can visit the chain. However, Ciavarra said that the campaign would wait until after the operators are comfortable with the new items.

The Cracker Barrel chain includes 624 restaurants, all of which are company-owned.

Contact Bret Thorn: [email protected].
Follow him on Twitter: @foodwriterdiary

About the Author

Bret Thorn

Senior Food Editor, Nation's Restaurant News

Senior Food & Beverage Editor

Bret Thorn is senior food & beverage editor for Nation’s Restaurant News and Restaurant Hospitality for Informa’s Restaurants and Food Group, with responsibility for spotting and reporting on food and beverage trends across the country for both publications as well as guiding overall F&B coverage. 

He is the host of a podcast, In the Kitchen with Bret Thorn, which features interviews with chefs, food & beverage authorities and other experts in foodservice operations.

From 2005 to 2008 he also wrote the Kitchen Dish column for The New York Sun, covering restaurant openings and chefs’ career moves in New York City.

He joined Nation’s Restaurant News in 1999 after spending about five years in Thailand, where he wrote articles about business, banking and finance as well as restaurant reviews and food columns for Manager magazine and Asia Times newspaper. He joined Restaurant Hospitality’s staff in 2016 while retaining his position at NRN. 

A magna cum laude graduate of Tufts University in Medford, Mass., with a bachelor’s degree in history, and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Thorn also studied traditional French cooking at Le Cordon Bleu Ecole de Cuisine in Paris. He spent his junior year of college in China, studying Chinese language, history and culture for a semester each at Nanjing University and Beijing University. While in Beijing, he also worked for ABC News during the protests and ultimate crackdown in and around Tiananmen Square in 1989.

Thorn’s monthly column in Nation’s Restaurant News won the 2006 Jesse H. Neal National Business Journalism Award for best staff-written editorial or opinion column.

He served as president of the International Foodservice Editorial Council, or IFEC, in 2005.

Thorn wrote the entry on comfort food in the Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America, 2nd edition, published in 2012. He also wrote a history of plated desserts for the Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets, published in 2015.

He was inducted into the Disciples d’Escoffier in 2014.

A Colorado native originally from Denver, Thorn lives in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Bret Thorn’s areas of expertise include food and beverage trends in restaurants, French cuisine, the cuisines of Asia in general and Thailand in particular, restaurant operations and service trends. 

Bret Thorn’s Experience: 

Nation’s Restaurant News, food & beverage editor, 1999-Present
New York Sun, columnist, 2005-2008 
Asia Times, sub editor, 1995-1997
Manager magazine, senior editor and restaurant critic, 1992-1997
ABC News, runner, May-July, 1989

Education:
Tufts University, BA in history, 1990
Peking University, studied Chinese language, spring, 1989
Nanjing University, studied Chinese language and culture, fall, 1988 
Le Cordon Bleu Ecole de Cuisine, Cértificat Elémentaire, 1986

Email: [email protected]

Social Media:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bret-thorn-468b663/
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Twitter: @foodwriterdiary
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