Following in the footsteps of other fast food corporations, Burger King’s Indian shops have removed tomatoes from their menu items due to rising vegetable prices following a poor crop.
“Even tomatoes need a vacation!” read a notice at an outlet in the capital New Delhi on Thursday.
“Due to unpredictable conditions on the quality and supply of tomato, we are unable to add tomatoes in our food… we are doing our best to get back tomatoes in our burgers.”
To address Hindu concerns to cattle slaughter, the burger franchise has been operating in India since 2014, replacing its typical range of beef burgers with a variety of chicken and vegetarian equivalents.
It is the latest of several chains to stop serving the vegetable.

McDonald’s said in July it was taking tomatoes off its menus as a temporary measure due to “seasonal issues”, local media reported.
American sandwich chain Subway followed suit the same month, saying they were facing “quality issues”.
Last week, India’s central bank warned that higher food prices had impacted household budgets and were expected to get worse.

It added that tomato prices had soared after bad weather and pest attacks in major production belts.
Indian Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said the government had removed import restrictions to source tomatoes from neighbouring Nepal to help ease pressure on food prices.