NOTE: Hardee's is already selling Angus burger's, which are longer to cook
and have a longer wait time, so hopefully mcdonald's has found a solution to
cook the angus burger's and also mantain their high level of customer
satisfaction regarding the time-frame issue. All this information will of
course be included with my upcoming full report.
where have you been?
Google Angus in this NG
Butm there hasn't been a review of it yet, which is what I'll be
contrubuting shortly.
Oh and BTW you said "this group", but you didnt say what group your posting
from.
Sorry:
alt.mcdonalds
I like the Angus Burgers, but being legally blind I didn't know until
a few weeks ago that they have a BBQ one.
I can't read the sign with descriptions as it it too far back behind
counter and McDimwits corporate office won't help me out with a list
of choices.
JERRY <jerr...@hotmail.com> writes:
> When I went to Mcdonald's today for lunch the
> order-taker when I pulled up to the box said
> would you like to try our new Angus-burger.
> Unfortunetly I didn't have time today to taste
> one but, very soon I will and post a full review.
You didn't have time? But you were already at the
box placing your order!
Jesus wept.
Geoff
--
"The most used phrase in my administration if I
were to be President would be 'What the hell you
mean we're out of missiles?'" -- Glenn Beck
> When I went to Mcdonald's today for lunch the
> order-taker when I pulled up to the box said
> would you like to try our new Angus-burger.
> Unfortunetly I didn't have time today to taste
> one but, very soon I will and post a full review.
That's old news. They have had angus burgers for a while, or at least they
have had the commercials on TV and radio, and the ads (with $-off coupons)
for AT LEAST 6 months.
No time? No time for what? Weren't you already there? Since they were the
"special" of the day, they were probably already cooked (yesterday?) and
would have been in the bag with your 6 orders of fries bafore you got to the
next window. No time? You really are the loser everybody says that you
are, How much time would it have taken for you to change your mind (assuming
that you even have one)?
> That's old news. They have had angus burgers for a while, or at least
they
> have had the commercials on TV and radio, and the ads (with $-off coupons)
> for AT LEAST 6 months.
Wrong. They only started selling them in July.
> No time? No time for what? Weren't you already there?
Time to EAT it, obviously. I have other burger's to eat. And other thing's
to do with my life. I have to schedule my time VERY carefully.
Excuse me, but if you took the time to read my message carefully you would
have read that I didn't have time to TASTE the burger, not to order one. I
plan all my fast-food meals in advance just to make thing's easier.
lmao........he claims he plans out his drive through orders well in
advance and can't switch at the last moment. lmao
I never said I can't swtich them, I said I didn't have time to try one. I
had other item's I wanted to taste that day.
JERRY <jerr...@hotmail.com> writes:
: You didn't have time? But you were already at the
: box placing your order!
> Excuse me, but if you took the time to read my message
> carefully you would have read that I didn't have time
> to TASTE the burger, not to order one.
Well, what exactly do you mean by "tasting" one? Do you
mean that the place had cut some of the things into bite-
sized squares with toothpicks in them, like the way food
samples are offered at Costco, and was handing them out
for free? (Unlikely, I admit. But bear with me. I'm
just trying to understand what you mean.)
Or was the order taker asking you if you wanted to actually
order one for yourself?
Either way, I don't understand why you didn't have time.
In the first case, the time expended in tasting a sample
would've been minimal.
And in the second case, it would've taken no more time
than ordering (and eating, which involves tasting)
whatever it was you'd already planned to order and
eat. Am I not right?
Help me out here, Jerry. I'm honestly having trouble
understanding the situation you found yourself in at
the time.
I mean, you obviously had time to drive to a fast-food
restaurant in the first place, make your order, and wait
for it to be cooked and packaged. So why was timing so
critical that you couldn't have either accepted a free
sample, or ordered something different from what you'd
planned to order?
Why would ordering (and tasting) an Angus burger have
taken any longer than ordering (and tasting) whatever
it was you'd originally had in mind? Unlike, say, a
Filet O'Fish, with its attendant three-minute wait,
burgers cook very quickly.
> I plan all my fast-food meals in advance just to make
> thing's easier.
Easier?
Maybe I'm unusual, but I never considered ordering fast
food to be all that difficult.
I'd have thought that a fast-food connoiseur such as
yourself would savor the ritual of perusing the menu
in realtime, and would want to postpone his selection
until the very last moment in order to ensure that he
ordered precisely what he was hankering for.
Having one, of course.
> Either way, I don't understand why you didn't have time.
Because i already had my heart set on other item's and I always order
enough food to fill me all the way up. And, if I order too much food, it
gets cold before I finish it all. So maybe saying "not enough time" isn't
the best phrase to use for it.
> Help me out here, Jerry. I'm honestly having trouble
> understanding the situation you found yourself in at
> the time.
I simply like to know what I'm having before I arrive at the store. I
don't like changing my plan's in the middle of the order.
> Easier?
>
> Maybe I'm unusual, but I never considered ordering fast
> food to be all that difficult.
Well I highly reccomend people know what they want BEFORE they pull up to
the order box, othing pisses me off more in the world then people (usually
women) parking at the menu box just staring at it for 10 minutes. I'm a
busy man, and I have respect for other busy people in line.
> I'd have thought that a fast-food connoiseur such as
> yourself would savor the ritual of perusing the menu
> in realtime, and would want to postpone his selection
> until the very last moment in order to ensure that he
> ordered precisely what he was hankering for.
Actually, I usually decide for lunch right away when I wake up, and for
after work during the last hour or so of work. Sometimes, when I have a
hard time deciding, I'll just drive around town for awhile until I get a
hankering.