Sweet potato fries are all the rage -- they're popping up on restaurant menus everywhere. And, while I was  watching The Mentalist, a commercial popped up for McCain Sweet Potato Superfries. Frozen goodness that just needs a little oven time. Commercials have an unhealthy sway over me. That's how I ended up loving sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½ Dry's green tea gingerale. (But we won't discuss the fruit juicer gathering dust in a cupboard.) So I'm adding frozen sweet potato fries to my next shopping list. I'll report back after I bake some. And, I know. I could buy some whole sweet potatoes, cut them up, and bake them almost as easily. But the McCain people went to all that trouble.
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A group of us had a nice buffet meal at the members-and-guests-only Union Club in downtown Victoria. Most memorable moment: the scorching hot buffet plates. I was too much of a sissy to hold mine barehanded, so I went back to the table for my cloth napkin and used that as a plateholder. I'm also incapable of holding hot tea in a paper cup; that paper heat-shield ring is not enough for my delicate hands.
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McDonald's in the U.S. is making its wi-fi free as part of an effort to get people to hang around more, buying coffee and sweets. Haven't tracked down anything yet on what McDonald's is doing in sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½ on the wi-fi front. Starbucks offers free wi-fi, but you have to become a member of their Starbucks club first, and sign in with an ID and password.
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Just had the green curry rice noodles with prawns and kale at Fifth Street Bar and Grill. Non-dairy, it said on the menu. It's among the best restaurant curry noodle dishes I've had. Sometimes, the noodles taste bland despite a spicy accompanying sauce. That's not the case with Fifth Street's version. The kale was a delight, soaked with curry flavour but still very recognizable as kale. And no skimping on the prawns — there were four large ones. A wonderful meal for $10.
We then went up the street, along Quadra, to the Italian Bakery (corner of Quadra and Tolmie) where we encountered hot, freshly baked loaves of bread — at 3 p.m.Â
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McDonald's has whimsical, engaging, and, in a way, puzzling packaging for its Quarter Pounders, Filets-O- Fish, and Chicken Nuggets.
They've probably been using the packaging for ages — but I haven't dined at a McDonald's for a long spell, so I've just clued in.
At first look, you might not even know that the Quarter Pounder or Filet-O-Fish box is from McDonald's. Mighty Simple, says the biggest type on the Quarter Pounder box. Dive In & Enjoy, says the one on the Filet-O-Fish. The name of the sandwich is in smaller type, and you have a picture of the sandwich.
The famous Golden Arches logo is hidden on a side panel.
The side panels also have whimsical drawings and little photos that hint at the ingredients.Â
There's also a sentence or two extolling the virtues of the sandwiches.
Chicken Nuggets come in a humble, but sensible paper bag. It's not elegant, but it works. The bag is covered with drawings and type. To Dip or Not to Dip, says one line. (An aside: when I bought the nuggets, I wasn't offered any dips, and I forgot to ask.)
Presentation, they say, plays a big role in the enjoyment of food.
For a fast food experience, McDonald's has done a nice presentation job, and has even provided its customers with a fair bit to read while they chomp through their politically-incorrect meal.
Some wondering:
What market research led them to this — present their products in packaging that hides the McDonald's identity?
To print the product name in smaller type?
And why so many words on the boxes? Does anyone apart from a packaging-design geek like me bother to read it?