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The burger wars that 59% of you know nothing about

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An Original Impossible Burger, left, and a Cali Burger, from Umami Burger, are shown in this photo in New York, Friday, May 3, 2019. A new era of meat alternatives is here, with Beyond Meat becoming the first vegan meat company to go public and Impossible Burger popping up on menus around the country. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
An Original Impossible Burger, left, and a Cali Burger, from Umami Burger, are shown in this photo in New York, Friday, May 3, 2019. (AP Photo/Richard Drew) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

For people of a certain age, (as in this writer), the phrase "burger wars" means McDonalds (MCD) versus Burger King (QSR). Over the years, that rivalry was diffused with the addition of Wendy’s (WEN), Jack in the Box, Sonic, Carl’s Jr., etc. and then updated and upgraded more recently with Shake Shack (SHAK) versus In-N-Out Burger, (for the record I like ‘em both).

Now though burger wars are traveling through another dimension (as Rod Serling used to say). We have entered the post-burger wars, Beyond (BYND) versus Impossible, which of course serve burgers made not from meat but from plants.

Sure, there are other non-meat companies, but Beyond and Impossible have taken the lead in terms of mindshare, (along with a big cut of market share), passing both other new entrants and those bleh health food store soy burgers that have been around for decades.

Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods, to use the companies’ official names, are both wildly similar and wildly different. Both companies were founded a decade or so ago by guys named Brown, Ethan for Beyond and Pat for Impossible, both committed green, alt-food types (Ethan and Pat are both vegan) who remain CEOs — though their bios diverge after that, (more below). Neither company has QSR (quick serve restaurant, i.e. McDonalds and Burger King) ambitions, but both have deals with such companies to offer their burgers and more.

The two companies also claim to not pay much attention to each other, which is true as far as it goes, except tell that to their employees who’re trying to get space in the meat cooler sections of supermarkets and doing partnerships. (Not surprisingly, each company has an old school burger partner, Beyond with McDonald’s (it also has alliances with Yum! Brands, Whole Foods, Starbucks and some KFC, Pizza Hut, and Taco Bell stores in China), and Impossible with Burger King (also with Trader Joe’s, Qdoba, White Castle, Red Robin, Kroger, and Starbucks.)

If this story feels very 2019 to you — who can forget Beyond’s red-hot IPO that May (the stock topped $230 that July) — consider that while, yes, BYND has come back down to earth (now $100), Beyond and Impossible have been heads down working to improve and expand their offerings. The onus is on Messiers Browns to prove these are sustainable endeavors and not flashes-in-the-pan. The passion is there for both, as I discovered when reading up on Ethan Brown and interviewing Pat Brown at the Web Summit in Lisbon this week (see below).

The good news for both companies is that consumption and sales of plant-based burgers keeps on climbing, according to Gallup: “Forty-one percent of Americans report having personally tried a plant-based meat... about half of adults younger than 50, versus 26% of those 65 and older, have eaten a plant-based meat.”