Showing posts with label Fast Foods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fast Foods. Show all posts

March 31, 2016

Harvard Square Au Bon Pain Closing March 31, 2016



[From article]
Yes, Au Bon Pain is leaving the Square like many of our other beloved restaurants and establishments. [. . .] It is even weirder when you realize that it has been in the Square for 32 years. You know how old 32 years is? This is before Radcliffe College fully integrated with Harvard University. The Olympics were held in Los Angeles and Ronald Reagan was president. And now, it will be gone.
If one really can't live with it, technically there is one located near Zinneken’s and another near the Charles. But neither are as easily accessible as the Harvard Square one and they close earlier than the 1 am time for which the Square establishment is known.
http://www.thecrimson.com/flyby/article/2016/3/29/au-bon-pain-closing/

Au Revoir to Au Bon Pain
By Kamara A. Swaby
The Crimson
Flyby

November 12, 2015

Online Food Delivery May Not Be From Where You Think





[From article]
Chew on this — the food you order on GrubHub and Seamless may have been cooked in a low-grade, or even totally unregulated, “ghost kitchen.”
Many restaurants listed on the food-ordering Web sites are not the ones that actually cook and deliver your food, a new report has found.
Many restaurants listed on the food-ordering Web sites are not the ones that actually cook and deliver your food, a new report has found.
A survey of 100 of the top customer-ranked restaurants on the popular sites revealed that just over 10 percent were “ghost” listings whose name and addresses are nowhere to be found in the city’s database of restaurant-inspection grades, NBC New York said.
Take the GrubHub listing for Really Chinese, at 235 E. 31st St. in Manhattan, for example. There’s no listing for such a restaurant in the city database, and there’s no physical restaurant at that address.
[. . .]
Worse, some of the fake listings could actually be fronts for people cooking out of their own kitchens or in off-the-grid rogue restaurants, the DCA warns.
“New Yorkers should not be deceived by fake listings when they are ordering food online,” city Consumer Affairs Commissioner Julie Menin said Wednesday.
Her agency has reached out to Seamless and GrubHub — which merged in 2013 but maintain separate Web sites — asking them to check that all of their listings are, in fact, registered with the city Health Department’s database of inspection grades.
Seamless and GrubHub are now doing so, a spokeswoman for the Web sites said — adding that the listing for both Really Chinese and Abby Chinese have already been taken down. “We are partnering with New York’s Department of Consumer Affairs to address this issue and remove inaccuracies from our platforms,” the spokeswoman said Wednesday.


http://nypost.com/2015/11/11/your-seamless-order-may-have-been-cooked-in-a-ghost-kitchen/

Your Seamless order may have been cooked in a ‘ghost kitchen’
By Laura Italiano
New York Post
November 11, 2015 | 3:53pm

May 13, 2015

Updated: Book Excerpt: Why Chicken Tastes Like Chicken


Posted April 26, 2015 8:15 PM ET; Last updated May 13, 2015 8:20 AM ET




[Excerpted from The Dorito Effect: The Surprising New Truth About Food and Flavor, by Mark Schatzker, out now, published by Simon & Schuster.]
Chicken of the 1940s was nothing like it is today. It was expensive by modern standards, and since chickens were often the by-product of the egg industry, they came in a range of sizes. There were broiler chickens, which were young and tiny — some weighed in at just a pound and a half — and so tender you could cook them under a scorching-hot broiler. Next came fryers, which were a bit bigger and less tender, but still small. After fryers came roasters, and last came “fowl” — old hens that were so tough they could be used only in soups and stews.
[. . .]
In 1946 and 1947, regional Chicken of Tomorrow contests were held. The cream of that group was invited to compete in the national event in 1948, which is how 31,680 eggs from 25 different states found their way to a hatchery in Maryland. Once hatched, the chicks were raised in identical pens and fed a secret diet that contained a minimum of 20% protein, 3.5% fat and 7% fiber.
[. . .]
The very principle demonstrated at the Chicken of Tomorrow contest would go on to doom the flavor of chicken and dumplings for decades to come: Chickens can be changed through breeding.
[. . .]
By 1967, Americans were eating twice as much chicken as they had in 1948, and by 2006, chicken had become so cheap and so abundant that Americans were eating nearly five times as much as they had in 1948.
The dream of Doc Pierce, in other words, has been gloriously realized. Chicken is number one. The country that formerly preferred beef now eats 26 billion pounds of chicken every year.
[. . .]
they are all broilers now. Words like “fryer” and “roaster” still appear in cookbooks, but they don’t exist anymore. We eat gigantic babies. As a paper in the journal Poultry Science puts it, if humans grew as fast as broilers, “a 6.6 lbs. newborn baby would weigh 660 lbs. after 2 months.”
[. . .]
We paid in flavor for this “improvement.” In 1961, Julia Child and her co-authors of “Mastering the Art of French Cooking,” stated that chicken “should be so good in itself that it is an absolute delight to eat as a perfectly plain, buttery roast, sauté or grill.”
Thirty-seven years later, Mark Bittman’s “How to Cook Everything” described chicken as “downright bland” and “essentially a blank slate.”
For the first 99.9925% of their domesticated careers, chickens ate all sorts of stuff: blades of grass, leaves, seeds, bugs, mice, frogs, meat scraps, dead rabbits, even snakes. Without green treats and outdoor foraging, chickens got sick and died. No one knew why.
[. . .]
A few years later, a Polish biochemist by the superb name of Casimir Funk took the stuff that makes brown rice brown — rice bran — and treated it with alcohol and phosphotungstic acid and was left with a tiny amount of an almost magical substance that could cure a pigeon just hours away from death by beriberi. Funk called this revolutionary substance a “vitamine.” (It was, in fact, vitamin B1, properly known today as thiamin, and which, over the past 50 years, has been depleted by half in vegetables such as cauliflower and collards.)
The study of nutrition would never be the same. Thanks to vitamins, deadly diseases like rickets, scurvy, beriberi and pellagra would become not only treatable but preventable. Eijkman was awarded a Nobel Prize. (Funk got bupkis.)
[. . .]
The taste of animal flesh is strongly influenced by what an animal eats. Flavor compounds in the food birds eat find their way into bird tissue. Scientists refer to this as biodistribution — it’s the same reason a dairy cow that eats onion grass produces milk that tastes like onions. And the food we feed chicken today has no flavor at all.
[. . .]
When you stop to consider that nearly half of all chicken sold is “further processed” — chicken nuggets, chicken sausage, chicken patties, chicken burgers, chicken strips, chicken cutlets, chicken Kiev — that adds up to a lot of “preflavoring.”
[. . .]
So much of the food we now eat is not only a lie, it is a very good lie. Modern food may be the most compelling lie humans have ever told.

http://nypost.com/2015/04/26/why-nothing-especially-chicken-tastes-like-it-used-to/

Why nothing, especially chicken, tastes like it used to
By Mark Schatzker
New York Post
April 26, 2015 | 6:00am

* * *

See also PBS Frontline, The Trouble With Chicken at this link

http://enoughroom.blogspot.com/2015/05/pbs-frontline-trouble-with-chicken.html

April 27, 2015

Pregnant Houston Woman Fired For Refusing To Pay For Money Robbed at Popeye's Fast Food



Marissa Holcomb
Photo: KHOU

[From article]
The pregnant Popeyes manager, who was fired less than 36 hours after a robbery, has been offered her job back.
Marissa Holcomb, who is a mother of three with a fourth child on the way, had a meeting with Z & H Foods owner Amin Dhanani on Wednesday, a day after our original story aired of her firing.
"He just apologized and pretty much offered me if I wanted to go back to his business and work there again," she said.
Holcomb says she was originally terminated because she refused to pay back money that was stolen during a robbery March 31. Dhanani argued she was fired because she broke policy multiple times by leaving too much money in the register.
[. . .]
"I told them I'm not paying nothing," Holcomb said, who said she was fired because she refused to pay the money back. "I just had a gun to me, I'm not paying the money."
Surveillance video shows a man run into the restaurant with a beanie over his face while waving a gun. He forced all employees to the floor, then turned his attention to Holcomb.
"By the back of my shirt, he pulled me up and he pushed me to the front," she said. "He told me to give him everything out of my safe."
But the only thing she could open were the registers.
Holcomb claimed after the robbery one of her managers gave her an ultimatum: Pay the money back or lose her job.
"I don't think it's right because now I'm struggling for my family because what I had to do to keep my life," she said.

http://www.khou.com/story/news/investigations/2015/04/21/pregnant-fast-food-worker-fired-after-being-robbed-at-gunpoint/26162183/

Popeyes attempting to rectify pregnant manager's firing
Tiffany Craig,
KHOU 11 News
10:02 a.m. CDT April 23, 2015



April 24, 2015

Harvard University Rents Out Public Land For Profit




Harvard University likes to think of the "Science Plaza" as their own private property. It is still city owned land, which the city allows Harvard to administer. Harvard not only uses public land for fund raising dinners among alumni, but now it also rents out public land for mobile retail food sales. 

[From article]
With the goal of finding the perfect combination for Harvard diners, Harvard Campus Services continues to experiment with the selection of food trucks serving in the Science Center Plaza under the University’s Common Spaces Initiative.
For years, Harvard has been bringing food trucks from local companies to the plaza, and Campus Services continues to experiment with the diversity of offerings.
[. . .]
The daily combination of food trucks available is determined by a strict schedule controlled by Campus Services. Each individual food truck company is told exactly which days of the week they can operate in the Science Center Plaza. As part of the agreement between Harvard and the trucks, food trucks must pay a $50 fee each day they conduct business in the plaza.
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2015/4/24/food-trucks-science-plaza/

Campus Services Seeks Optimal Food Trucks
By HANL H. PARK and LARA C. TANG
Harvard CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
April 24, 2015

September 30, 2013

Florida Lady, CEO of Food Company, Has No College Degree



Woman in charge: Kat Cole started off her food industry career as a waitress at Hooters to pay for college, but soon rose through the ranks and is now the president of Cinnabon.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2439404/From-sports-bar-boardroom-How-Hooters-waitress-worked-way-president-Cinnabon.html

From the sports bar to the boardroom: How one former Hooters waitress worked her way up to become president of Cinnabon
Kat Cole started her career in the food industry as a Hooters waitress to pay for college
But she quickly rose through the ranks of the company and was a vice president by the age of 26
In 2010, she left Hooters to become chief operating officer of Cinnabon
Within two months of getting her MBA she was promoted to president
This year, Cinnabon is expected to take in $1billion in sales, due in part to Cole's focus on licensing deals
By Daily Mail Reporter
PUBLISHED: 13:21 EST, 30 September 2013 | UPDATED: 13:28 EST, 30 September 2013

March 24, 2010

Fast Foods Forever

[From article]

"It sat on my shelf for a year as a silent witness to our fast-food industry," she wrote. "It NEVER smelled 0bad. The food did NOT decompose."

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/happy_meal_is_forever_RoJyZSNwAsqEZMJ0qCXmgM

A Happy Meal is forever

Last Updated: 6:15 AM, March 21, 2010

Posted: 3:58 AM, March 21, 2010