NEW YORK - After two years of secret taste tests, KFC said Monday it would 
stop frying chicken in artery-clogging trans fats, but New York City restaurants 
being urged to do the same say it's not so easy. 
KFC's announcement, which won praise from consumer advocates, came an hour 
ahead of a public hearing on a proposal that would make New York the first US 
city to ban the unhealthy artificial fats. 
 
 
 | 
    Edward Patterson, a Kentucky Fried Chicken employee, chows 
 down on some of the company's trans fat-free product in New York, Monday, 
 October 30, 2006. KFC said Monday it is phasing out trans fats in cooking 
 its Original Recipe and Extra Crispy fried chicken, Potato Wedges and 
 other menu items, but hasn't found a good alternative yet for it's 
 biscuits. [AP]
  | 
Industry leaders dished up a plateful of reasons why such a plan shouldn't be 
adopted in the nation's restaurant capital. 
The move would be a "recipe for disaster that could be devastating to New 
York City's restaurant industry," said E. Charles Hunt, executive vice president 
of the New York State Restaurant Association. 
The shift by KFC and a handful of other fast food chains - and the 
effort by New York health officials - mark an aggressive crackdown on an 
ingredient that is consumed in large doses around the country. 
An average American eats 4.7 pounds of trans fats a year, and the oil is used 
as a shortening in baked goods like cookies, crackers and doughnuts, as well as 
in deep frying. Experts say a ban in New York would reverberate across the 
country because the city's food industry is so large. 
The ban initially would have been a harsh one for KFC. But the company now 
says that by next April, all 5,500 of its US restaurants will have switched from 
trans fat-rich partially hydrogenated vegetable oil to a new soybean oil 
believed to be less likely to cause heart disease. 
Some KFC sites have already made the switch in secret trials to see if 
customers would notice a difference. They did not, and KFC President Gregg 
Dedrick said he was confident the switch won't prompt complaints about taste. 
"There is no compromise," he said at a Manhattan news conference. "Nothing is 
more important to us than the quality of our food and preserving the terrific 
taste of our product." 
Health advocates applauded the company's switch. The Center for Science in 
the Public Interest, which sued KFC last spring over the trans fat content of 
its food, announced Monday that it was withdrawing from the lawsuit. 
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