Majority of McDonalds locations are franchised so quality varies widely.
Comment on Mildly McInfuriating
FireWire400@lemmy.world 4 days agoDid the quality really go down? I don’t go to McDonald’s very often but I think the quality has improved a lot from what I remember it being in the 2000s/2010s.
Granted, I’m in Germany; I can’t speak for any other country’s locations
CidVicious@sh.itjust.works 4 days ago
hark@lemmy.world 4 days ago
Maybe it’s location based, but I had a mcflurry about a year ago and was given a pathetically small amount of the topping poorly mixed in a terrible filler ice cream. Perhaps the ice cream in the mcflurry was always terrible, but I hadn’t noticed it before when I would get a lot more of the topping. Also, their coffee was better for a time but it has reverted to burnt mud.
UNY0N@lemmy.world 4 days ago
Germany has regulations for food that are much more demanding than those of the US, so there isn’t much that fast food restaurants can do to cut costs in Germany aside from the order touchscreens and such.
Here’s an example.
Excerpt about additives:
Believe it or not, big name food brands often adjust their ingredients in European countries compared to their products released in the United States. Certain ingredients that are illegal in Europe are still allowed, and commonly used, in the United States. The following eight common ingredients are approved in the U.S. but banned by the European Union or select European states.
rBGH (rBST)
Ractopamine
Potassium bromate (bromated flour)
Brominated vegetable oil (BVO)
Olestra
Azodicarbonamide
Coloring agents (Red #40, Yellow #6, Yellow #5, and Blue #1)
BHA and BHT
And these additive ingredients expand past the EU into the United Kingdom. For example, the American version of Kraft Macaroni and Cheese is entirely different from Kraft’s “Cheesey Pasta” sold in Great Britain. Take a look at the differences below.