So that customers can expect the same great quality at every one of McDonald's locations.
Oh, dude, hamburgers taste different in outer space because of the lack of gravity affecting your taste buds. Like, the flavors don't spread out the same way, so it's like a whole new culinary experience. Plus, who wouldn't want to be the first person to eat a burger in space? That's like intergalactic foodie status right there.
McDonald's coffee if not gourmet in the strictest sense. It comes from beans from all over the world and is then over-roasted to create a homogenized, same taste around the U.S. flavor.
same as English
Henry's Drive-In was at the corner of Oakton Street and Milwaulkee Avenue. They wee a copy of McDonald's in Desplaines and tahe burgers and fries about the same price in 1957. I read that it was started by a man who had attended Hamburger University --McDonald manager training school and later stepped out on his own in competition with what he had learned. The hamburgers were infamous for the holes they had in the center-supposedly to make them cook faster on the grill, but interpreted as skimping on the beef by most of us who ate there from time to time.
Because McDonald's Is so nice and is smells so nice with coke or sprite! Mehn it's so nice!m
No, since you will be using the same pan it wont matter.
Names such as "McDonald's" are not translated, they are kept the same.
from what I heard, Judy's Hamburgers was built by Dave Thomas' brother and named it after his daughter, "Judy", hence the same decor and all.
There are no specific recipes to make McDonalds hashbrowns. There are however, frozen hashbrowns that can be bought at the grocery store which can be deep fried to taste the same as the hashbrowns purchased at McDonalds.
No
Yes. Technically, steak tastes the same no matter were you are, so that depends on if you like steak