Traitorfish
The Tighnahulish Kid
This graph suggests that some make a sandwich using a hamburger and white bread, which is upsetting to me.
If I eat some bread, and then some meat, and then some bread, is that a temporal sandwich?
If I eat plain risotto, and then some mushrooms, did I eat mushroom risotto?
This graph suggests that some make a sandwich using a hamburger and white bread, which is upsetting to me.
No sir it will not, and I have been experimenting on this of late.Ketchup will also destroy white bread.
depends how much you cheaped out on the bread, and more specifically how much of a monstrous glob of ketchup you're putting on it... it works okay in a pinch for sliced bread hot dogs, it really doesn't work for hamburgers because yes it's too much ketchup and it strains the structural integrity past breaking. Texas toast or other thick bread is the only solution if you really don't want to buy proper buns.
When I was a kid this was my mother's substitute for taking us to McDonald's. For it to work the patty has to be sufficiently overcooked as to have no juice left at all lest the bread turn into a soggy paste. Ketchup will also destroy white bread. Overcooked meat on plain bread, the height of British Isles cuisine. I don't see how you were upset, or even surprised at this.
Eddie Murphy did a bit on this once, whereby he described his mother making him a hamburger that she promised would be "better than McDonald's"... and then proceeded to essentially make a Salisbury steak/meatloaf'ish concoction consisting of ground beef, mixed with chopped green pepper and chopped onion, served between two slices of wonderbread, which of course, looked and tasted nothing like a Mc'Donald's burger. Having had exactly the same experience growing up, several times... I can definitely empathize.Depending on the quality of the mushrooms you may think that you did, possibly while rainbows were flowing from your nostrils and the general vicinity was melting like a Dali painting.
When I was a kid this was my mother's substitute for taking us to McDonald's. For it to work the patty has to be sufficiently overcooked as to have no juice left at all lest the bread turn into a soggy paste. Ketchup will also destroy white bread. Overcooked meat on plain bread, the height of British Isles cuisine. I don't see how you were upset, or even surprised at this.
Eddie Murphy did a bit on this once, whereby he described his mother making him a hamburger that she promised would be "better than McDonald's"... and then proceeded to essentially make a Salisbury steak/meatloaf'ish concoction consisting of ground beef, mixed with chopped green pepper and chopped onion, served between two slices of wonderbread, which of course, looked and tasted nothing like a Mc'Donald's burger. Having had exactly the same experience growing up, several times... I can definitely empathize.
As an aside... anyone who has worked at McD's (I have) and therefore knows the precise recipe for their burgers knows how to make burgers which taste, in-fact, "better than McDonald's" while still retaining the general flavour of McDonald's.
My favorite custom things to do were putting the sweet-and-sour nugget sauce on the crispy chicken sandwich, which is predictably delicious, making Big Macs using Quarter-Pounder meat instead of regular patties, and putting lettuce and tomato on the Filet of Fish.When I worked there ling time ago we made burgers for ourselves.
Wasn't that much wrong with the ingredients. The owner operator favorite involved a double quarter pounder with egg and bacon.
I liked adding cheese and tomato to a M Chicken sometimes with bacon.
My consumption if McDonalds went up though. From never to handful of times a year.
My favorite custom things to do were putting the sweet-and-sour nugget sauce on the crispy chicken sandwich, which is predictably delicious, making Big Macs using Quarter-Pounder meat instead of regular patties, and putting lettuce and tomato on the Filet of Fish.
Yeah I saw a sign for the "Super Mac" the other day and I figured that was what they were doing. I'm surprised they didn't start doing that alot sooner. I can't possibly be the only employee who thought of it.They sold Big Mac's here with quarter pounder meat called them super macs.
Adding lettuce and replacing ketchup with big Mac sauce is a trick as well with the quarter pounder.
I think the year 2000 was last time I had a filet of fish.
They've improved since then. Only the meat gets kept in a warming drawer now instead of the burger in a warmer.
Yeah I saw a sign for the "Super Mac" the other day and I figured that was what they were doing. I'm surprised they didn't start doing that alot sooner. I can't possibly be the only employee who thought of it.
The warmer drawer was already around when I worked there. It was a dramatic improvement, especially for the burgers because it kept them not only hot, but moist as well. The other ingenious component of the system was the vertical toaster/mini-conveyor at the start of the sandwich "assembly line". So in addition to a hot patty from the warmer drawer, you also get a freshly toasted bun with every sandwich.