McFacts About McDonald's

On April 15, 1955, Ray Kroc opened his own McDonald’s franchise in Des Plaines, Illinois (seen below). While tons of people head to this so-called “first McDonald’s” every year, the fact is, the building standing there is not only not the first McDonald’s (Kroc actually opened the ninth location of the franchise), it’s not even the original building, but just a reconstruction. Even so, that spot of ground did have a huge impact on American life as we know it and spawned what was at one point the largest restaurant chain in the world --the title is now held by Yum! Brands (KFC, Taco Bell, etc.) and followed by Subway.

Image via ChicagoGeek [Flickr]

How Did McDonald’s Get Taken Over By Kroc?

When I was a kid, I always thought whoever Mr. McDonald was, he must be super rich. As it turns out, Richard and Maurice McDonald, who started the original restaurant, only made $2.7 million on the deal. While that does seem like a good amount of cash, just think how much the restaurant is worth these days. To make matters worse, the brothers insisted on retaining the rights to their first restaurant in San Bernardino, so Ray opened a McDonald’s restaurant right by theirs and ran them out of business. Worse still, even though the original deal involved the brothers earning 0.5% of the chain’s annual revenues, Kroc refused to honor that part of the verbal agreement after the McDonald’s brothers refused to sell him their original restaurant and the land it stood on.

And it’s not like the McDonald’s Brothers didn’t do anything but open an everyday burger joint; if they did, Ray probably wouldn’t have been so interested in taking the whole thing over. They innovated many of the ideas that have made modern fast food restaurants so successful, including assembly line kitchens, simplistic menus and self-serve counters. The menus had nothing on them but hamburgers, cheeseburgers, French fries, potato chips, sodas, milkshakes and apple pies. Because things were so quick and efficient, prices were about half of what it cost to get a similar meal at a diner.

Image via _skynet [Flickr]

McDonald’s Across the Globe

It wasn’t too long after Kroc took over completely that the chain expanded out of America, first to Canada, then Costa Rica, Panama, Japan, Europe and Australia. These days, there's McDonald's located all over the world. In fact, the image above shows just how widely spread they are in the U.S. While this world-wide globalization has led to many negative views of the corporation, some people say the company has actually helped improve the standard of service in some areas of the world. For example, when McDonald’s opened in Hong Kong in 1975, it was the first restaurant to consistently offer clean public restrooms. Soon afterwards, customers began to demand the same from other restaurants in the area. Whether McDonald’s has a positive or negative impact in the country it enters may be a matter of opinion, but one thing the restaurant takes great pride in is their localization of the menu based on the native tastes of the area. Some interesting menu items from around the world include:


  • Quebec has a regional treat known as poutine, which is a dish with French fries and cheese curds covered in gravy. McDonald’s in the area serve this as a popular side dish.

  • Throughout Canada, you can order chicken fajitas from McDonald’s. This seemed weird to me that you can’t find these in South Western American states where fajitas are a popular staple of Mexican restaurants.

  • In Egypt, you can find Big Macs with chicken or fish in place of beef and a “McFalafel” sandwich.


  • Throughout the Middle East, McDonald’s offers a “McArabia” sandwich, which is a piece of flat bread with chicken or beef patties. They also serve a special wrap called the Paneer Salsa wrap, which takes fried, seasoned cottage cheese and wraps it in flat bread with veggies.

  • Most Indian menus are largely different than those in America, as pig and cow products are not served outside of Southern India. The chicken and fish are also prepared in separate areas because or strict religious laws regarding the preparation of food for vegetarians. One of the area’s specialties is the Maharaja Mac, which was originally made with lamb meat but now is made with chicken. They also serve a dish called the McCurry pan, which consists of a bowl made from flakey dough filled with chicken in a tomato-curry sauce. Of all the international McDonald’s menu items, I think this is the one I’d want to try the most.



  • Throughout Asia, you can order a side of McRice in place of fries, this is just an order of plain rice with a cool name.

  • In China, you can enjoy pineapple and taro pies and a Shogun burger with teriyaki pork. You might also consider the Rice Fantastic, which is like a beef or chicken sandwich with rice patties in place of buns.

  • On the Chinese island of Cheung Chau, you can also enjoy mushroom burgers in place of beef during the local Bun Festival.

  • In Japan, they serve something called the Ebi Fillet-O, which is a fried shrimp sandwich. There is also a Tamago Double Mac, which has three beef paties, a poached egg, bacon and pepper sauce. You can even top off your meal with tea milkshakes.

  • In Thailand they sell corn pies.

  • In Finland and Norway, you can have wraps with fried fish instead of chicken or beef.

  • In El Salvador, you can often have French fries made with yucca instead of potatoes.

  • In Mexico, a popular breakfast option is the McMolletes, English muffins with refried beans, cheese and pico de gallo salsa.

  • In New Zealand, a popular favorite is the Kiwiburger, which has beef, a poached egg, veggies, cheese and beetroot.

Images via Weather Sealed, xetark [Flickr], Allan Reyes [Flickr],

Good Ol’ American Innovation

Even in America, certain locations have their own specialty treats. The McLobster and McCrab are served seasonally throughout New England. And in the late 1990’s, Chicago locations offered a hamburger with barbecue sauce and Canadian bacon that was dubbed “the Beef Wennington” after a notable Chicago Bulls player.

Many of the company’s biggest successes were actually created locally by franchisees, including the Filet-O-Fish, the Big Mac and the Egg McMuffin.  The Filet-O-Fish was made by a Cincinnati franchise owner who wanted to offer his Catholic customers a meal they could still eat on Fridays and during lent. Ray Kroc tried a similar idea at his original restaurant, but his Hula Burger, a sandwich a pineapple slice in place of meat was a huge flop.

As for the Big Mac, it was created by an early Pittsburgh franchiser who wanted to serve something adults would enjoy when feeding their kiddos at the restaurant. The corporate heads told him he could only create new menu items creating ingredients on the existing menu, which is where the Big Mac was born. The Egg McMuffin was in a similar position as the Big Mac inventor, only he went ahead and added a new creation to the menu without contacting headquarters. The corporation was quite upset that he started selling the McMuffin without their blessing, but they quickly changed their minds when they saw how popular it was. Image Via VirtualErn [Flickr]

McDecor

It’s not only the menu that headquarters like to keep consistent. Locations are largely required to look similar to one another on the inside. That’s not to say there aren’t a few stand out locations though. The “Solid Gold McDonald’s” by the Rock and Roll of Fame is themed after fifties rock and roll. Victoria, British Columbia has a restaurant with a 24-carat gold chandelier and other fancy light fixtures (seen above). The McDonald’s in Stratford-upon-Avon has a very subtle design, as all buildings in the area are required to conform to the historic look of Shakespeare’s birthplace. Whether you love McDonald’s or loathe it, there’s no arguing that the restaurant has had a huge impact on our society. Heck, Fast Food Nation has estimated that one of eight workers in America have been employed at the restaurant at some point of their lives. So you guys have any weird McDonald’s in your area? Maybe one with unique menu items or a strange design.

Image Via buschap [Flickr]

Sources Mental Floss #1, #2, Food Network Humor, Wikipedia #1, #2, #3


In some countries with a significant Muslim population (SEA), "hamburgers" are known as "beefburgers". I remember one day going to a burger joint, and our Muslim exchange worker wouldn't eat a hamburger, even after being told it was just ground beef, and even after personally examining such a hamburger.

Malaysia has a "Prosperity Burger" which seems most popular during Chinese New Year.
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We used to have a sandwich called McBode in my local McD's (Campina Grande, Brazil). It was made with goat's meat and it was quite good.
Dishes with goat's meat are very popular around the area.
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I was in Rome late last year and discovered the McDonald's there have added the "il Mac" to their menu. It's a hamburger with Emmenthaler cheese on a ciabatta roll. I had to try it, though I never go to McDonald's stateside... it actually wasn't too bad!
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We went to 2 McDonalds in Italy (we were trying to save money where we could lol). Neither of them had anything different than what you find here in the US. Both bathrooms were disgusting though. No toilet seats in either one of them, and the guys restrooms consisted of nothing but a nasty stained hole in the floor.
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It's well known that the Big Mac is nothing more than a stolen Gino's Giant. The Giant was around long before the Big Mac was, the person who "created" the Big Mac was a former Gino's employee. Rip.Off.
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They used to have chicken fajitas at every McDonald's. You know what? They were really good - better than the burgers and fries, and not terrible for you (plenty of veggies).

Those were the halcyon days...
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When I was a kid we had a McDonald's that had a huge Captain Cook pirate ship in the middle of it where you could sit and eat. And there were frequent appearances by characters back in those days, including the Captain and the Hambuglar when he was still pointy and scary-looking. You hardly see them now.
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I agree with Mr. Stranger. Their commercials just remind me of the 30 lbs he put on. I haven't stepped foot in a McDonalds since I saw that movie.
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I recently finally watched that supersize me movie. Load of BS. Sure anyone not exercising and eating double quarter lbers for every meal, or every day is going to get sick and gain a ton of weight.
Just like I'm sure anyone fixing themselves burgers and fries at home every day would probably have the same results.
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Ha I never really thought about the real story behind McDonald. It seems to me Kroc was a dbag.He ran the brothers out of business that was wrong. I thought Kroc was a good man. I can tell you this he really stuck it to them.
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Up in Anchorage, Alaska we have the McKinley Mac (which I believe is a bigmac made with 1/4 pound patties) and a very fancy, multifloored, modern architecture styled location. Complete with touchscreen video games, a fireplace, and a fancy artistic interior.
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Ummm, it is Ray Kroc, not Croc.

A few more facts about the Big Mac. I worked New Products for McDonald's at the time and was the one responsible for scheduling its national roll out.

1. Most McDonald's buns were caramelized on the grill. The crown and the heel (top and bottom) were so grilled. McDonald's added a conveyor belt toaster to toast the center section of the bun to give it structure so it would not collapse during and disappear once the Big Mac was assembled.

2. The Big Mac at the time of its introduction was wrapped in foil. There were no clam shell containers or boxes at the time. McDonald's did not want the Big Mac to be crushed in wrapping, stacking and bagging so we (I actually) developed a paper board collar that the Big Mac was built in to protect it during wrapping.

3. Over the course of the introduction of the Big Mac, McDonald's went from using no lettuce to becoming the country's largest consumer of ice berg lettuce.

4. Before being named the Big Mac it was called the "Blue Ribbon Burger."

5. At one point the secret ingredient in Big Mac sauce was chutney.

6. There were a number of places selling Big Mac type burgers before McDonald's came out with the Big Mac. I think the Big Mac was modeled more off the Big Boy than the Gino's Giant. However McDonald's was, at one time, intimidated by Gino's whose average unit sales were significantly higher than Gino's
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I was used to seeing a McCafe in each of the McDonalds locations while in New Zealand, where you could order a latte or cappuccino with your meal and there were various cakes and pastries available too. Not sure if they started adding those coffee shop additions in the US too though.
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"Victoria, British Columbia has a restaurant with a 24-carat gold chandelier and other fancy light fixtures (seen above)."

The picture 'seen above' is not of the chandelier in the Victoria BC location. Im not sure where the poster sourced the image from but the real chandelier is actually far more impressive (couple hundred crystals and the thing is about 10 feet long). I also cant vouch that the restaurant hsa 'other fancy light fixtures'.. its really just a regular macdonalds otherwise.

Mike from Victoria.

PS: Google image search for "victoria mcdonalds chandelier" actually comes up with a picture, albeit not a great one.
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I haven't eaten there since I was twelve. I used to eat a ton of big macs. My mom would bring them home to me after work. I just got really sick of them (literally and figuratively). But ah... to be twelve again and eat whatever you want without gaining an ounce. =(

As per Super Size Me, it's worth nothing that Morgan Spurlock's most alarming changes weren't his weight, but in his overall health. Yes, he was eating around 5,000 calories a day, but how many people count calories? It's much easier to eat 5,000 calories than one might think, especially at fast food restaurants that don't list the caloric value of the food they serve, which is by and large deep fried in oil or processed to the point where it lacks any nutritive value (becoming "empty calories"). Most people know you shouldn't eat at McDonald's every day, but those weren't the people Spurlock hoped to reach.

And anyway, he still eats there, so... apparently he doesn't hate the place. =/

Also, I'm surprised you didn't mention the feng shui McDonald's in California. The article mistakenly suggests that the company is trying this out to boost sales. I'm pretty sure it was entirely the franchisee's decision.
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I can safely inform you that both the Mcfalafel and McArabia are really good. I wish they would do an international promotion or something here in the states so those who can't travel far can sample the "exotic" cuisine of other McDonald's.
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listening to a bunch of Mark Knopfler's stuff tonight- including 'Boom, Like That'- a pretty concise and accurate song about Ray Kroc.

A few things I like about McDonald's-
they really do work to improve the place where they're at. I mean- they have high standards for upkeep and cleanliness.. which shines through when you're traveling in countries where this is not the norm (I live in Eastern Europe and McD's is sometimes a sane spot in a crazy world).
A Big Mac tastes the same no matter where you are. So, when I'm on the road and need food, if it's all strange and I'm tired and hungry, chances are I'll hit McD's simply because I know their stuff.
They pay a decent wage in places where it can be hard to get paid a decent wage.
They invest in local economies; they don't just import import import.
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In Florida (not sure if there are other elsewhere), you can actually get pizza, panini, wraps and other crazy things at McDonalds. They have a separate "bistro" counter next to the normal one inside the restaurant that you order from.

Menu: http://www.mcfun.com/files/menus/Sand-Lake-Road-Menu-with-ne.jpg
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I used to actually drive by the 'original' McDonald's location all the time, as that is my home town. Its just a little museum now.

I recently took a business trip to Sweden, and though I did not eat at McDonald's, the inside of the one I was near was VERY nice and always had families inside. Also, I found out that in Sweden the McDonald's competitor there is called MAX.
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Blasted new zealanders. A burger with beetroot is a McOz not a McNewZealand! Beetroot makes up part of the burger with the lot which includes a fried egg, bacon and beetroot. And another commenter mentioned the McCafe: they are standard in all full size Australian stores. You can get espresso coffee, a selection of cakes and pastries etc from them.
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@Cola

Dude, 5000 calories at McDonalds is 10 Big Macs a day. I'm pretty sure if you're eating 10 Big Macs a day, you know you're overeating. Claiming that you don't know the calorie count is ridiculous. Try again.
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In Madrid we also got a Macdonal's that have to conform to the historic look of the Gran Vía:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/madridlaciudad/4053480992/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/madridlaciudad/4053479768/
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LisaL writes, "We went to 2 McDonalds in Italy (we were trying to save money where we could lol). Neither of them had anything different than what you find here in the US. Both bathrooms were disgusting though. No toilet seats in either one of them, and the guys restrooms consisted of nothing but a nasty stained hole in the floor." You obviously have not been to the McDonald's in Reno.
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Personal McDonald's facts:

I went to high school with the son of the guy who is credited with creating the Big Mac. He also owned a number of McDonald's franchises in the Pittsburgh area.

Our last names are close alphabetically so we sat next to each other at graduation where he fell asleep.

Years later, my wife, who's not from Pittsburgh, wound up sitting next to him on a beach in South Carolina.

I used to like Big Macs a lot as a kid but rarely eat the now.
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Try again? Why don't you try re-reading my comment, Chesthair? I wasn't suggesting people who eat 5,000 calories a day are eating ten big macs. I only said it's difficult to count calories when caloric value remains undisclosed. As someone who thinks about calories, I know just how hard it can be to determine if, say, you have a big lunch at a thai place. Who knows how many calories are in that tasty beef curry, fried wontons, and fried banana with thai iced tea? Many people have such lunches and then go home to equally big dinners. Most people are obviously not consuming 5,000 calories a day, but consider this: when you gain a significant amount of weight, you REQUIRE more calories and crave more food to maintain your weight, making it that much easier to over eat. In a country where empty calories are everywhere, is it any wonder that our bodies crave so much food?

Try again.
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In central Pennsylvania we have a McDonald's dedicated to NASCAR champion Bill Elliot.
They have one of his old racecars hanging from the ceiling.

I loved the McRibs and the McDLT's!
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Kroc and Richard Nixon used to be buddies; Kroc donated to Nixon's election campaigns and often took him out on his yacht.

In return, Nixon vetoed several minimum wage bills during his time in office - guess who was and still is the largest min. wage employer in the US?

I've been to McD's exactly four times in my life, each time because I really had no choice. Otherwise, I steer clear of it and other burger chains, preferring locally owned and operated places. I don't care for the food at McD's (except I remember the fries being fairly good) and the most nourishing thing about one of their burgers is the air between the meat and bun.
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im in Sask, Canada...
our McDinks have the usual
"i thought, until i stumbled on this page"
burgers, fries, pitas, salads, happy mealz, milkshakes, cow hearts, and something called "McWetSicles" in summer, ...don't ask me what it is, don't care, ...also you just believed me for a second on the last two things i listed, ...ima burger king/A&W dude, ...hava good one
thanx for readin!
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@Splint, especially when it is clearly marked on the container, and marked throughout most stores. The reason why that dude got so fat was 'cause he refused to exercise.

It's common knowledge that lack of exercise makes you fat, regardless of what you eat.
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McDonalds in the UK are pretty ok where i live, clean, fast and good food!

Although, i had to take a dump in the toilets, noticing that the toilets are very clean but there had to be a catch... After taking a number 2, i noticed that the toilets would not flush...

Dont think ill be going back there any time soon lol..
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