Fast food is something radically new. Indeed, the food we eat has changed more during the past thirty years than during the previous thirty thousand years.
For thirteen weeks a medical student there consumed nothing but White Castle burgers and water. When the student not only survived the experiment but also seemed pretty healthy, people started to view hamburgers in a new light. Now hamburgers seemed wholesome, not deadly.
someone who refuses to conform to standards of conduct
“We have found out...that we cannot trust some people who are nonconformists,” Kroc once said. “We will make conformists out of them in a hurry. The organization cannot trust the individual; the individual must trust the organization.”
a crescent-shaped seagoing vessel propelled by oars
Kroc began to resent the McDonald brothers, claiming that while he was doing all the hard work—“grinding it out, grunting and sweating like a galley slave”—they were sitting at home, reaping the rewards.
the working together of two or more things to produce an effect
Walt Disney also pioneered the marketing practice now known as synergy. The aim of synergy was to link many products together in the mind of a consumer and secretly advertise them all at once.
a concrete representation of an otherwise cloudy concept
Episodes of Disneyland advertised Disney films, books, and toys. Most of all, the TV show advertised Walt Disney himself, the living, breathing embodiment of the brand—the man who neatly tied all these products together into one fun, cheerful, friendly idea.
For years children’s clubs have been considered an effective way both to advertise and to collect information about kids. These clubs appeal to a child’s need for friendship and belonging. Disney’s Mickey Mouse Club, formed in 1930, was one of the trailblazers.
“We believe that the McDonald’s brand is so omnipresent already in America,” the spokesman said, “that having it in music, having it in TV, having it in movies, is no more intrusive than anything else children experience these days.”
As workers moved into houses downtown, small businesses opened to serve them. At J. C. McCrory Co. 5 and 10 Cent Store you could buy socks and pants; at John W. Dean Co. you could find children's shoes; H. L. Doll and Co. was a popular hardware store; and the Alice Govnice Confectionery on South Queen Street was the place to go for ice cream, candy, and chocolate.
At Burger King restaurants, frozen hamburger patties are placed on a conveyor belt and come out of a broiler ninety seconds later fully cooked. The ovens at Pizza Hut and at Domino’s often use conveyor belts.
permitting mutual substitution without loss of function
Instead of celebrating individual talent, the system seeks workers who are interchangeable. It seeks workers who can easily be hired, fired, and replaced.
a union of interests or purposes among members of a group
Fliers criticizing the union were distributed; they featured a drawing of Pascal with money falling from his pockets. Instead of encouraging cooperation and solidarity, the company pitted one young worker against another.
The fries are sealed in brown bags, the bags are loaded by machines into cardboard boxes, and the boxes are stacked by machines onto wooden pallets. Forklifts driven by human beings carry the pallets to a freezer for storage.
use a liquid to dissolve out or remove a substance
Because potatoes contain different amounts of sugar at different times of the year, Lamb Weston adds sugar to the fries during the fall and leaches sugar out of them in the spring.
The taste of a french fry is largely determined by the cooking oil. For decades, McDonald’s cooked its french fries in a mixture of about 7 percent soybean oil and 93 percent beef fat. The mix gave the fries their unique flavor—and more saturated beef fat than a McDonald’s hamburger.
make known to the public information previously kept secret
The flavor industry is highly secretive. Its leading companies will not disclose the formulas of their flavor compounds or the names of their clients. These secrets help protect the reputations of beloved brands.
The act of drinking, sucking, or chewing a substance releases its gases. They flow out of your mouth and up your nostrils, or up the passageway in the back of your mouth, to a thin layer of nerve cells called the olfactory epithelium. It’s located at the base of the nose, right between your eyes.
a liquid substance capable of dissolving other substances
And what does that artificial strawberry flavor contain? Just these few yummy chemicals: amyl acetate, amyl butyrate, amyl valerate, anethol, anisyl formate...neryl isobutyrate, orris butter, phenethyl alcohol, rose, rum ether, y-undecalactone, vanillin, and solvent.
not completely dried and slightly sticky to the touch
It is basically a mechanical mouth. It measures all the things that can give a food the right mouthfeel: the bounce, creep, breaking point, density, crunchiness, chewiness, gumminess, lumpiness, rubberiness, springiness, slipperiness, smoothness, softness, wetness, juiciness, spreadability, springback, and tackiness.
a solution obtained by steeping or soaking a substance
One of the most widely used color additives comes from an unexpected source. Cochineal extract (also known as carmine or carminic acid) is made from the dead bodies of small bugs harvested mainly in Peru and the Canary Islands.
Created on Sun Jul 12 16:43:52 EDT 2020
(updated Tue Jul 14 09:52:12 EDT 2020)
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