mcdonald s
- McDonald's plans to invest about $104 million in 135 Maryland locations.
- What happened in Starbucks isn't really about Starbucks, says Leonard Pitts Jr., it's about America.
- Local residents can share their blessings with local nonprofits this holiday season.
- A 38-year-old Edgewood man was shot early Saturday morning at an Edgewood residence and then ended up a short distance away at the Edgewood McDonald's on Route
- McDonald's is offering delivery service through UberEATS starting Monday. The service was rolled out at 44 McDonald's restaurants in the Baltimore area.
- In a world of Baconators, Big Macs, and fried chicken taco shells, fast food seems to revel in its role as spectacular junk food. Until, well, it doesn’t.
-
Greetings, Fast Foodie readers. Welcome back after a bit of a long (and unintentional) hiatus. In the time since my last column, KFC brought back its
- Perdue is the first major American poultry supplier to stop using routine, low dose antibiotics in their agricultural operation. If Perdue, which processes approximately 13 million chickens each week, can make this change, why can't everyone?
- Jack J. Hubberman, a former Baltimore businessman who with a partner established a popular Ocean City rib joint, J/R's, "The Place for Ribs," died Sunday from cancer at his Pikeville home. He was 87.
- As Bill Paterakis prepares to take the helm of the family's companies following the death of his father, John Paterakis Sr., on Sunday, the son said he expects to take a more conservative approach. The family plans to continue to develop Harbor East and to expand the bakery business.
- John Paterakis, the multimillionaire risk-taking baker who built his H&S Bakery into the largest privately owned in the country, redeveloped Harbor East, and made governors and mayors his political beneficiaries, died Sunday. He was 87.
- Baltimore's H&S Bakery, a family-owned business best known for supplying McDonald's with its hamburger rolls, said Wednesday it has begun an expansion of its Fells Point location.
- The U.S. economy is growing again — about 2.5 percent annually in the second quarter and going forward — but good jobs remain scarce and wage gains lackluster. New technologies are reducing the demand for workers, but poor government policies are making matters worse.
- At 95 years old, when most people are well into their golden years and decades beyond the workforce, Harriett Clopper still drives herself to work to her job at McDonald's on Sharpsburg Pike in Hagerstown — something she's been doing for the last 20 years.
- Eric Dufault's edgy play about cockfighting, "Year of the Rooster," receives vibrant Baltimore premiere from Single Carrot Theatre.
- The new ad campaign for the buttermilk crispy chicken sandwich at McDonald's has an attractive young woman handing out the sandwiches for free alongside a purported food truck.
- Site grading and excavation has started for a Waffle House and a Pizza Hut Express being built at the corner of Route 1 and Milton Avenue in Fallston, one of the few vacant properties left on the busy stretch of highway between Bel Air and the Baltimore County line.
- Maintaining a healthy lifestyle seems to have a reputation of being so expensive that only wealthy people can truly manage it.
- At the intersection of technology, higher wages and business profits, who wins? I guess that depends on how you define winning.
- Now seems as good a time as any to define, well, what exactly is fast food? My City Paper colleagues and I came up with a rubric.
- Some people, though, look at $1 million as chump change; those people are corporate CEOs.
- Riverview Elementary School opens up a lending library to parents so that they could take new books out to read with their kids.
- Baltimore County needs another yardstick to measure its success beyond property and income tax rates
- The Hillary Industrial Complex is setting up a Manhattan Project to answer the question, "Who should Hillary be this time?"
- By the time the new Pratt Street restaurant opened its doors, promptly at 11 a.m., about 25 customers had queued up in the freezing temperatures.
-
- Executives with Baltimore-based H&S Bakery announced Wednesday their purchase of a new fleet of cleaner-running, propane-fueled delivery trucks that they said would cut their emissions in half in Baltimore.
- Executives with Baltimore-based H&S Bakery announced Wednesday their purchase of a new fleet of cleaner-running, propane-fueled delivery trucks that they said would cut their emissions in half in Baltimore.
- Leon B. Speights, founder of Leon's Pig Pen, died Oct. 14 at his Bentalou Street home of kidney failure. He was 74.
- For Austin Bradburn a fresh cup of coffee, brewed and delivered among the busy early morning hallway rush, became an unlikely path into the complex social world of his high school.
- The magical night never has to end for bride, groom and guests
- Its origins are murky, but there are still free cups of Joe to be had on National Coffee Day
- When one Bel Air business shuts its doors for good, it's often an opportunity for something else, particularly in the world of local eateries, where the comings and goings can be frequent and often without much warning.
- McDonald's shares sunk to their lowest level since early 2013 on Monday, a day before the company is expected to report its third consecutive decline in monthly sales at established stores.
- Baltimore Ravens fans might have another reason to cheer for a sack of the opposing teams' quarterbacks this season -- free Big Macs
- Fans make pilgrimages to this Stewart's franchise on Pulaski Highway, the truck-battered stretch of U.S. 40 in eastern Baltimore County, to recall the food experiences of their youth.
- Attorneys for two convicted robbers are challenging investigators' use of cellphone data, saying that it breached their privacy and that investigators should have used a search warrant to get it. Their appeals in federal court thrust the convicts into the center of a debate about police powers and the meaning of privacy in the digital age.