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-   -   Food and Drink KFC Cheese Donuts (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=276384)

Nickel D 09-17-2013 04:37 PM

KFC Cheese Donuts
 
http://www.delish.com/food/recalls-r...ese-donuts-kfc

Who's comin' with me to Indonesia?

TribalElder 09-17-2013 04:41 PM

Where the **** have stuffed crust donuts been all my life

Hammock Parties 09-17-2013 04:42 PM

Dumbasses just need to start making pizza donuts and be done with it.

Buck 09-17-2013 04:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pam Oliver's Forehead (Post 9988095)
Dumbasses just need to start making pizza donuts and be done with it.

Why isn't this a thing? We've had bagel bites for decades.

Hammock Parties 09-17-2013 04:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Buck (Post 9988108)
Why isn't this a thing? We've had bagel bites for decades.

A larger format would be awesome.

CrazyPhuD 09-17-2013 05:33 PM

<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/8-4P1WPE-Qg" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

RealSNR 09-17-2013 07:00 PM

A friend of mine has a wife from Indonesia. She ****ing loves KFC. It's like crack to her. That's because KFC is one of the American fast food franchises that actually does really well over there. Indonesians don't give a shit about eating burgers, but goddamn they love their KFC.

JD10367 09-17-2013 07:42 PM

Japanese go crazy for KFC at Christmas. :shrug:

http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/food...-on-christmas/

December 14, 2012

Why Japan is Obsessed with Kentucky Fried Chicken on Christmas

It’s Christmas Eve in Japan. Little boys and girls pull on their coats, the twinkle of anticipation in their eyes. Keeping the tradition alive, they will trek with their families to feast at … the popular American fast food chain KFC.

Christmas isn’t a national holiday in Japan—only one percent of the Japanese population is estimated to be Christian—yet a bucket of “Christmas Chicken” (the next best thing to turkey—a meat you can’t find anywhere in Japan) is the go-to meal on the big day. And it’s all thanks to the insanely successful “Kurisumasu ni wa kentakkii!” (Kentucky for Christmas!) marketing campaign in 1974.

When a group of foreigners couldn’t find turkey on Christmas day and opted for fried chicken instead, the company saw this as a prime commercial opportunity and launched its first Christmas meal that year: Chicken and wine for 834 2,920 yen($10)—pretty pricey for the mid-seventies. Today the christmas chicken dinner (which now boasts cake and champagne) goes for about 3,336 yen ($40).

And the people come in droves. Many order their boxes of ”finger lickin’” holiday cheer months in advance to avoid the lines—some as long as two hours.

The first KFC Japan opened in Nagoya in 1970 and quickly gained popularity. (There are now over 15,000 KFC outlets in 105 countries and territories around the world.) That same year, at the World Exposition in Osaka, KFC and other American fast food chains like McDonald’s were met with great market testing results and helped jump start the westernized “fast food” movement in Japan. After the big commercial push in ’74, the catchphrase “Christmas=Kentucky” paired with plenty of commercials on TV caught on.

The “Americaness” and simplicity of the message rather than any religious associations with the holiday is what makes it appealing. The Financial Times reports:


“Japan is well known for taking foreign products and ideas and adapting them to suit domestic taste, and Christmas is no exception. A highly commercialised and non-religious affair, lots of money is spent annually on decorations, dinners and gifts. KFC is arguably the biggest contributor, thanks in part to its advertising campaign.

‘One of the reasons the campaign lasted so long is that the message is always the same: at Christmas you eat chicken,’ said Yasuyuki Katagi, executive director at Ogilvy and Mather Japan, the advertising agency.”

These days, KFC records its highest sales volume each year on Christmas eve. Back office staff, presidents and execs come out to help move the lines along. Fried chicken and Christmas have become synonymous: KFC’s advertisements feature major pop cultural figures chomping on drumsticks, the company website even has a countdown until Christmas.

And this year, the company launched a campaign that takes the holiday hype to new heights. From December 1 through February 28 passengers on select trips between Tokyo and eight U.S. and European destinations can enjoy KFC in-flight.

But Japan’s love of American fast food does not dim with the Christmas lights once December 25 has come and gone—KFC’s ability to take its traditional foods and adapt them to Japanese culture has made a bucket of chicken a meal worth having year round. This April, they opened a three-story restaurant at the south entrance of Shimokitazawa station in Tokyo which offers the company’s first-ever, fully stocked whiskey bar—what their website says gives visitors a taste of “Good ‘ol America.”

Though, if you ever find yourself in Japan and not in the mood for fried chicken, Wendy’s Japan offers a $16 foie-gras-and-truffle burger.

HoneyBadger 09-17-2013 08:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SNR (Post 9988481)
A friend of mine has a wife from Indonesia. She ****ing loves KFC. It's like crack to her. That's because KFC is one of the American fast food franchises that actually does really well over there. Indonesians don't give a shit about eating burgers, but goddamn they love their KFC.

Was she expensive?

allen_kcCard 09-17-2013 10:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HoneyBadger (Post 9988851)
Was she expensive?

What wife isn't?

CrazyPhuD 09-17-2013 11:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by allen_kcCard (Post 9989529)
What wife isn't?

The one with a 30 day money back guarantee? :shrug:


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