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7 Major Restaurants That Are Getting Rid of Artificial Ingredients In the fast-food industry, all-natural is in.

By Kate Taylor

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Restaurant chains are facing a nutritional conundrum: go all natural, or suffer the consequences.

On Tuesday, Bloomberg reported that Papa John's is cutting artificial ingredients and other additives from the menu. The company plans to eliminate 14 ingredients such as corn syrup, preservatives and artificial colors by the end of 2016, an effort that will cost about $100 million a year.

In a world where a food blogger can unleash a health-conscious army on any restaurant chain using an artificial ingredient with a complicated name, more and more companies are trying to simplify their ingredients list. As fast casuals, who have boasted fresh ingredients from the start, flourish, more traditional fast-food franchises are making big promises to do the same. Even McDonald's is determined to repair its "fake food" reputation, with announcements that the company will only source chicken raised with minimal antibiotics and vague plans to explore more localized ingredients.

Here are seven chains that have decided to go big with commitments to cut artificial ingredients in their food.

Related: Soon, Google Will Allow You to Order Fast Food Simply by Smiling at the Cashier

Papa John's

Papa John's $100 million-a-year ingredient purge will primarily affect the chain's dipping sauces, according to Bloomberg. The process hasn't been easy, with CEO John Schnatter saying that removing additives have forced the company to compromise on flavor in some cases. The company has already removed MSG from its ranch dressing and trans fats from its garlic sauce and began posting its ingredients online earlier this year.

Subway

As the chain revealed on Thursday, Subway will gradually make changes to the menu over the next 18 months to remove artificial colors, flavors and preservatives. The company says the process is more difficult for the chain than many other quick service restaurants, due to the chain's size and breadth of ingredients. To kick off the process, Subway is introducing a new roast beef recipe, roasted with garlic and pepper, which the company describes as the latest example of menu improvement at the chain.

Pizza Hut

In May, Pizza Hut announced plans to complete the process of removing all artificial flavors and coloring from the menu by the end of July, something that will affect all available pizzas. The chain also revealed a multi-year effort to cut sodium in its offerings, saying that by 2020, 20 percent of Pizza Hut pizzas will contain just one third of the daily recommended dietary allowance for sodium.

Taco Bell

The same day Pizza Hut announced plans to cut artificial ingredients, sister brand Taco Bell did the same. The Mexican chain promised to remove all artificial flavors and coloring by the end of the year, with plans to remove additional artificial preservatives and additives by the end of 2017. The new standards will affect 95 percent of the chain's core food items.

Related: How Au Bon Pain's Executive Chef Puts Her Line Cook Experience to Good Use

Noodles and Co.

The fast-casual noodle concept announced plans to remove all artificial colors, flavors and preservatives from menu items by the end of the third quarter in early May. The same day, Noodles and Co. also announced that it was testing naturally raised, antibiotic-free chicken – another hot topic in the food industry, as McDonald's sources chicken raised with minimal antibiotics and Chipotle struggles to find pork providers that fit the company's stringent standards.

Chipotle

Chipotle has long had the reputation of leading the pack in terms of fresh, sustainable food, so it's not surprising that the chain's plan to go back to the basics in terms of food emerged in a slightly different form. In April, the company became the first national chain to cook entirely with non-GMO ingredients. Chipotle's next target: artificial preservatives, which the company still uses in their burritos.

Related: Chipotle Is Testing a New Menu Item

Panera

Panera spelled out exactly what it planned to remove from its food by releasing a "No No List" in early May. The list named 150 artificial additives that had been removed from the menu, or that that the company planned to remove from the menu by the end of 2016. Panera actually made the promise less than a year prior to cut all artificial additives from the menu, but this represented an important and transparent step in getting the job done.

Kate Taylor

Reporter

Kate Taylor is a reporter at Business Insider. She was previously a reporter at Entrepreneur. Get in touch with tips and feedback on Twitter at @Kate_H_Taylor. 

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