logo
Cult US pretzel chain opening in Australia at the end of July

Cult US pretzel chain opening in Australia at the end of July

Sky News AU17 hours ago
Popular US pretzel chain Auntie Anne's will open its first Australian franchise later this month in Western Sydney.
The first Australian Auntie Anne's outlet will officially open its doors on July 26 inside Westfield Parramatta.
Speaking to news.com.au, business partners Yu-Jin Lee and Johann Wong said bringing the chain to Australia was a dream in the making dating back to childhood.
'This has been a dream in the making for years,' Mr Lee said.
'We have always loved pretzels and one of our fondest childhood memories is going to the mall to grab an Auntie Anne's pretzel.
'It's a cherished experience for us and we hope to recreate and share that joy in Australia now too.'
Mr Lee said customers can expect the full Auntie Anne's experience, with pretzel varieties including cinnamon sugar, sweet almond, and pepperoni cheese, along with sweet and savoury nugget bites with the dough mixed, hand-rolled and baked on site.
'Our pretzels are baked continuously throughout the day, so no matter when you stop by, you're getting them hot, fresh, and at their absolute best,' he said.
'There's a huge appetite for the brand already – we've seen the buzz online and the excitement is real.'
The announcement sparked a chorus of Auntie Anne's fans to take to social media.
'If they open in Melbourne, I'll go broke, no joke," one fan wrote.
Another said 'OMG, I manifested this.'
Melbourne food blogger @nectoriouspapi told news.com.au that the wave of American fast food brands entering Australia showed no signs of slowing down, but added they need to open in other cities, not just Sydney.
'It's really exciting to see US chains opening in Australia,' he said.
'Many of us have heard the hype, or if they're lucky tried the items on holiday, but to be able to eat these well-known brands on our own doorstep means it's now available to everyone.
'These brands are often names we've grown up watching in the movies, so it's a thrill to have the option to buy something we've never tried. The big test is really whether or not they stand the test of time.'
Auntie Anne's started in Pennsylvania back in 1988 and now boasts more than 2000 stores around the world.
There are reportedly plans to expand across Australia with the opening of five more stores if the Western Sydney store is profitable.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Biocurious: with fresh grant funding, Emvision's Emu stroke device won't take a step backwards
Biocurious: with fresh grant funding, Emvision's Emu stroke device won't take a step backwards

News.com.au

time20 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Biocurious: with fresh grant funding, Emvision's Emu stroke device won't take a step backwards

A fresh $5 million government grant takes Emvision's cumulative non-dilutive funding to $25 million The company is trialing its Emu stroke detection device with a view to FDA clearance The lightweight variant First Responder could give ambulances rapid stoke detection capabilities With US biotech grant funding under pressure, drug and device developers need to delve more deeply for sources of valuable non-dilutive capital. Happily, numerous programs are still available for Australian life sciences plays willing to do their homework. In the case of stroke and traumatic brain injury (TBI) detection device developer Emvision, grant funding and partnerships have underpinned the company since it was formed in 2017. Co-founder and CEO Scott Kirkland puts the running tally at $25 million. This month, Emvision was awarded a $5 million Australian Government Industry Growth Program Commercialisation and Growth Grant. The funding is to accelerate development of Emvision's portable brain scanner, First Responder. Other funding sources have included the Australian Stroke Alliance, the NSW Medical Devices Fund and – we kid you not – the Modern Manufacturing Medical Products Manufacturing Translation Stream Project. Take nothing for grant-ed Kirkland says applying for grants takes significant time and management focus – and companies usually need to kiss a lot of frogs. 'You really need to dig around on the guidelines and look at what they have funded previously,' he says. 'But there are plenty of opportunities where objectives are boosting domestic manufacturing, creating engineering roles, generating IP and tackling the big health and societal burdens.' In the case of the US, the military complex can fund programs of specific interest, such as TBI assessment. The company is likely to progress TBI – a 'significant unmet need' – via a collaboration or grant. The Golden Hour As far as 'big health societal burdens' go, Emvision is tackling the need for more portable – and thus faster – ways to detect a stroke. The first 60 minutes post-event is known as the Golden Hour. But even the second hour – dubbed, you guessed it, the Silver Hour – is vital. 'With a stroke, time is brain,' Kirkland says. 'The faster it is diagnosed and treated; the more of the brain function that can be saved'. If treated early, a clot is softer and more treatable via clot-busting drugs or surgical removal of the blockage. In the US, a study of Mobile Stroke Units (MSUs) with a CT (computed tomography) scanner reported 33% of patients being treated in the first hour. This compared to just 3% for the normal ambulance arm. 'If you can bring the diagnostics tools to the patients, you save a lot of time to achieve better functional outcomes and less disability,' Kirkland says. Different strokes for different folks Clinicians and paramedics need to know whether the stroke is a blockage (ischaemic) or a bleed (haemorrhagic) as different treatments apply. To date, patients have been imaged with bulky, centralised scanners in hospitals. Emvision is developing a portable bedside scanner – Emu – which can be moved bed to bed on a cart. These units weigh about 100 kilograms, compared with a few tonnes for a typical CT unit. A trained healthcare professional can operate Emu, whilst a CT requires a radiographer. In a regular neurological intensive care unit, Emu's ability to hop from bed to bed is better than carting fragile patients to radiology. Emvision hopes Emu will pave the regulatory pathway for First Responder, its backpack-sized version for use in road and air ambulances and remote locations. On trial Emvision's work currently revolves around a pivotal trial for Emu, to support US Food & Drug Administration (FDA) clearance under the De Novo (novel device) pathway. The company hopes this will pave the way for First Responder approval under the less arduous 510(k) predicate device route. The US trial sites consist of New York's Mt Sinai, Florida's Mayo Clinic and Houston's Memorial Hermann Texas Medical Centre. A west coast site is pending. Locally, the trial has enlisted the Royal Melbourne Hospital and Sydney's Liverpool Hospital. They are all high calibre research centres handling high stroke volumes. The study aims to enrol up to 300 suspected stroke victims, who will receive the usual clinical care along with an Emu scan. Overlaying that, Emu then determines whether the stroke is a bleed or not, with a primary endpoint of at least 80% sensitivity and specificity for haemorrhage detection. Sensitivity is the ability to detect positive results, while specificity is the ability to discount false positives. The patients might have a different 'stroke mimic' condition, such as a migraine or epileptic seizure. 'We are seeking to also demonstrate that a 'mimic' does not confound our algorithms,' Kirkland says. Never a step back with Emu In an earlier domestic trial called Emview, Emu achieved 92% sensitivity and 85% specificity for bleed detection in a smaller cohort. For blockages, the results showed 95% sensitivity and 85% specificity. Kirkland says CT is good for detecting bleeds, with a 90-99% sensitivity. Without the use of contrast agents, it's less so for blockages (30-70%). (About 80% of stroke cases are blockages). Kirkland says while CT (or MRI) scans provide the 'ground truths', Emu's performance doesn't need to be identical to these machines. Especially in the case of First Responder, operators will use them where traditional neuroimaging is unavailable. Eyeing the US market While strokes afflict 15 million people annually – one-third fatally – there are fewer than 50 dedicated Mobile Stroke Unit ambulances globally. (Melbourne hosts two of them). That's because they cost upwards of $1 million to set up and a similar amount to operate annually. First Responder could provide every ambulance with a stroke and stroke type detection function. The US market eclipses anywhere else: 60,000 road ambulances – half the global tally – and 1500-1800 air ambulances. Post approval, Emvision's initial focus is likely to be in the expanded 'stroke belt' of southern states including Texas and Florida. For lifestyle and other reasons, the incidence of strokes there is much higher than the rest of the country. First Responder takes to the skies Alongside the Emu study, Emvision expects First Responder pre-hospital studies to get underway with the Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS), a Melbourne MSU and a standard road ambo. 'The initial focus is on feasibility, usability and how it fits into the workflow,' Kirkland says. 'In parallel, we are doing product development translation from advanced prototypes to commercial production units.' To date, RFDS scanning of healthy volunteers in real-world conditions has confirmed First Responder's durability. The company is obtaining ethics approval to scan actual RFDS patients. A cost-effective solution In theory, Emu and First Responder should walk off the shelves, given the age-old problem they promise to solve. But for cash-strapped healthcare systems, cost is always a factor. Kirkland expects an Emu to cost around $US175,000 – about a third of the price of a decent CT machine. First Responder is likely to be half or a third of the cost of an Emu. The company also expects to charge US$25 per Emu scan and US$50 per First Responder scan for a 'consumable'. This single-use item is a liquid that flows through a silicon membrane used to adjust to varying head sizes. 'We think we have a compelling, cost-effective solution,' Kirkland says. Kirkland says chasing grants requires patience as the process winds from initial application to presentations, due diligence and contract negotiations. 'I won't give away too many secrets because there are still a lot of grants we want to apply for."

Australia news LIVE: Albanese to visit Great Wall of China after Xi meeting; ASX to retreat as US inflation rises
Australia news LIVE: Albanese to visit Great Wall of China after Xi meeting; ASX to retreat as US inflation rises

Sydney Morning Herald

time28 minutes ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Australia news LIVE: Albanese to visit Great Wall of China after Xi meeting; ASX to retreat as US inflation rises

Latest posts Latest posts 7.04am US inflation accelerates as tariffs cast shadow on Wall Street US inflation jumped to 2.7 per cent in the last month from 2.4 per cent in May, causing most American stocks to slump on Tuesday and setting the stage for a retreating Australian sharemarket on Wednesday. Price increases for generally imported goods, such as toys and clothes, were among the standout items from the inflation report, with economists noting that the rise may be a result of the worldwide tariffs proposed by President Donald Trump as part of a bid for global markets to open further to the US. 'Inflation has begun to show the first signs of tariff pass-through,' according to Ellen Zentner, chief economic strategist for Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. Futures at 6.05am AEST pointed towards a loss of 64 points, or 0.7 per cent, for the Australian sharemarket on Wednesday, after it added 0.7 per cent on Tuesday. 7.03am What's making news today By Daniel Lo Surdo Hello and welcome to the national news live blog. My name is Daniel Lo Surdo, and I'll be helming our live coverage this morning. Here's what is making news today: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will visit the Great Wall later today, on the fourth day of his China visit. It follows his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing's Great Hall on Tuesday, which Albanese said was guided by Australia's national interests and is 'aimed at co-operating wherever we can, disagreeing where we must'. Bradley John Murdoch, one of Australia's most notorious killers, has died in custody in the Northern Territory, NT News is reporting. Murdoch, 67, was serving a life sentence for the murder of British backpacker Peter Falconio in 2001. His death from throat cancer means Falconio's family may never know where the backpacker's body was dumped. The Australian sharemarket is set to retreat on Wednesday after Wall Street slumped as US inflation accelerated to 2.7 per cent last month, from 2.4 per cent in May. Economists pointed to increases in goods generally imported to other countries, such as clothes and toys, which could be rising due to the proposed global tariffs announced by President Donald Trump. Sydney FC has registered a stunning 2-1 win over the Hollywood-backed Welsh football side Wrexham AFC at Allianz Stadium on Tuesday night. Sydney's winner was scored by 18-year-old Joe Lacey, whose mother is Welsh and aunt works for Wrexham as a paramedic, saying that the goal was 'very big for me and my family'. Former Treasury boss to push for improved climate outcomes in Press Club address By Mike Foley Anthony Albanese's plan to build 1.2 million homes, improve the nation's transport system and lift Australians' living standards will fail if the government cannot fix broken nature laws and arrest the decline of the environment, former Treasury boss Ken Henry warns. In a speech to the National Press Club on Wednesday, Henry, who served as Treasury boss under John Howard and Kevin Rudd, will argue that despite pressure on fast-track important developments, the country also needs a resilient and rich natural environment. Without that, Australia will be just 'building a faster highway to hell'. 'If we can't achieve environmental law reform, then we should stop dreaming about more challenging options,' Henry will tell the press club.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store