Search JTA's historical archive dating back to 1923

The Bagel, Now a U.S. Staple, Becomes a Victim of Its Success

April 24, 2000
See Original Daily Bulletin From This Date
Advertisement

America’s largest bagel chain finds itself in the hole.

The Einstein/Noah Bagel Corp., which owns 539 bagel shops across the United States, announced last month that it won’t be able to pay off a $125 million debt and may have to shut down unless it finds new financing.

Other bagel makers are in similar straits, victims partly of overexpansion but mainly of changing American tastes, according to The Los Angeles Times.

The popularity of bagels took off about a decade ago, when health and weight- conscious consumers sought a substitute for the high-fat doughnut.

An average-sized plain bagel has only 1 gram of fat — but 300 calories – – compared to a chocolate glazed doughnut’s 14 grams of fat — and 260 calories.

With booming economic times, however, and few signs that past diet regimens have notably slimmed the American figure, consumers are ready to live it up, say the experts.

“Americans are either tired of experts telling them what’s good or bad for them, or they’re just too tired to care,” notes the Times.

Giving weight to the analysis is the fact that while Noah shut down 14 of its stores last year, doughnut chains such as Krispy Kreme and Winchell’s are opening up new locations at a record pace.

To some extent, the chain’s stores became victims of their own success, with convenient supermarkets, doughnut shops, and coffee joints like Starbucks jumping in and offering bagels to their customers.

The company was formed in March 1995 through the combination of four leading regional bagel retailers — Brackman Brothers Bagel Bakery from Salt Lake City; Bagel & Bagel in Kansas City, Offerdahl’s Bagel Gourmet in Fort Lauderdale and Baltimore Bagel Co. of San Diego.

The firm later acquired Noah’s New York Bagels.

Recommended from JTA

Advertisement