A popular Taiwanese café chain has now disappeared from all of China’s major online food platforms after Tsai Ing-wen paid a visit to one of their outlets in Los Angeles earlier this week and ignited an internet uproar.

In the wake of the Taiwanese president’s brief visit, Chinese netizens have angrily accused 85°C Bakery Café of supporting Taiwanese independence with some even calling for a boycott of the company which has more than 600 shops in mainland China.

Yesterday morning, 85°C responded to the online outrage by issuing a groveling apology in which it praised the Chinese government and voiced its “firm support” for upholding the ”1992 Consensus” and the “cross-strait family.”

However, it appears that the company’s apology hasn’t completely smoothed things over as 85°C no longer appears on China’s two major food apps, Meituan-Dianping and Ele.me, meaning that customers can no longer order deliveries from any of the chain’s locations. Those searching for information or reviews of 85°C on Dianping are met only with a notice saying that the app is “unable to find the appropriate merchant.”

Meanwhile, it appears that 85°C will also have to deal with being hassled by local authorities. Food safety officials in the Fujian city of Quanzhou carried out inspections at more than a dozen bakeries yesterday. However, as Apple Daily points out, the only official photos released from the inspections were from two 85°C locations, with officials publicly accusing the shops of various health and safety offenses.

It remains to be seen what this all means for 85°C’s business prospects in mainland China, but it ain’t looking good.