Fans of BurgerFi burgers and Anthony's Coal Fired Pizza may have discovered recently that their favorite meals are a bit more difficult to come by. That's because BurgerFi International, the parent company of both chains, has closed nearly 20 underperforming locations in recent months, mostly located in Florida, New England, and the Mid-Atlantic region, the company disclosed in a court filing this week. The locations were shuttered in the lead-up to BurgerFi's Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which was announced earlier this month. In a year littered with chain-restaurant bankruptcies, the company cited familiar reasons for the move, including rising food and labor costs and inflationary pressures that have made diners more hesitant about eating out. BurgerFi had alluded to the restaurant closures earlier this year, but in a court filing this week, it listed each location individually on a schedule of leases that it plans to reject as part of the bankruptcy process. In the filing, BurgerFi said it had determined that the restaurants were "suboptimal performers in terms of revenue and profits." All personal property left behind at the locations is now considered abandoned. The list of 19 locations includes 10 BurgerFi restaurants and 9 Anthony's. They were located in Florida, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Maryland.