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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWhen you were a child or teen, what fast food place did you like to go to? I honestly did not go as my parents did not
buy food out, except for the crappy hoagies at K-Mart.
LogDog75
(1,351 posts)Back in the early 60s, we only hit McDonald's a couple of times. I remember when their sign on the Golden Arches say "Over 11 Million Served."
debm55
(61,371 posts)Enter stage left
(4,625 posts)LisaM
(29,679 posts)It was considered a treat. Neither restaurant had drive throughs or indoor seating, so we would get it (always in summer) and take it to a local park and eat it at picnic tables. Afterwards, I suppose my parents sat and smoked while my sister and I played on the playground equipment. (We always went to the same park when we did this, a really nice one that had playground equipment that was stuff like Flintstone cars with big stone wheels).
debm55
(61,371 posts)rsdsharp
(12,080 posts)If we went to Mason City (The Music Mans River City) 30 miles away, wed sometimes go to McDonalds.
debm55
(61,371 posts)Ritabert
(2,566 posts)There weren't many options.
debm55
(61,371 posts)Eugene
(67,237 posts)There was also a nondescript pizzeria in Downtown Boston, when my mom took us shopping.
debm55
(61,371 posts)malthaussen
(18,608 posts)But that was a restaurant more like Howard Johnson's. We didn't start getting McDonald's type fast food until I was already a teenager.
-- Mal
debm55
(61,371 posts)Diamond_Dog
(40,921 posts)We didnt have all the fast food choices back then, either, like there are today I remember McDonalds, Red Barn, and maybe a couple little burger joints in town and that was it. I never set foot in a McDonalds until I was in high school, I went with friends a couple times but did not eat the burgers.
Deuxcents
(27,532 posts)Every once in a while to Howard Johnsons for an ice cream cone. Those were bribes because when we got home, we had to wash the car because of the salt from the beaches! We were too young to get it but everyone was happy 😃
Endlessmike56
(232 posts)Freddie
(10,139 posts)We all did (I still do) and the closest one was a half-hour away in the big city. Whenever we shopped in the city (3 or 4 times a year) wed stop for dinner at Burger King on the way home.
jgo
(1,024 posts)You slide your tray down a metal line, and pick up individual servings as you slide by.
I guess there are still some of these around - more fancy now than the one we went to when I was young.
Zackzzzz
(393 posts)CTyankee
(68,386 posts)Nittersing
(8,469 posts)The only treat I remember going out for was an ice cream cone.
We camped across country for a vacation and on very rare occasions would stop at a Howard Johnson's.
TBF
(37,073 posts)so fast food was occasional weekends. I loved Pizza Hut, Shakeys (which was also pizza), and Taco Bell.
Oh, and I forgot about A&W. That was the one place we had that was only 10 miles away & it was the drive-up kind. We'd do that sometimes on Friday night.
mopinko
(73,851 posts)b4 that, we never, ever ate out. it was a big deal.
my 1st job was at a tijuana taco, the 1st u.s. mexican food chain.
a kid i went to school w got a job flipping burgers at mickeys at 16. only co he ever worked for. now owns 23 stores and is a very wealthy man.
Midnight Writer
(25,665 posts)It was a special occasion for our family. We couldn't pay the rent, let alone eat at "restaurants".
They had a running special, 6 burgers for 1 dollar. There were six kids living with us in the family at that time. Once in a while, on a payday, my Mom would stop and get 6 burgers, one for each of us. She would do without so each of us could have one.
In spite of the hardship, she provided us kids with a happy home.
Love over money, every time.
JoseBalow
(9,666 posts)When I was a little kid, I loved the Big Hat sign!

happybird
(5,406 posts)It was the only fast food option in our small town and a trip there was always exciting.
The real treat was when Dad would pick up Popeyes on his way home from the city.
The Madcap
(1,997 posts)RIP. Only on the Sundays when I got to choose.
Oh, and Holly Farms Chicken restaurant. I just loved the seasoning on their fried chicken.
Walleye
(45,291 posts)I dont know if it was a chain nationwide, but it was pretty popular around the Philadelphia area. They had a big Mac style burger that was much better than the actual big Mac, and before McDs came to town.
Maninacan
(332 posts)Mr. Quick was the first fast food place in my town. I lived too far out to ever go anywhere til i got a car.
IA8IT
(6,445 posts)JT45242
(4,098 posts)Hotcakes and sausage with a High C Orange drink before little league games.
Or Long John Silvers for fish on Fridays (mom was Catholic and kept doing fish oonly on Fridays even after Vatican 2)
Bluestocking
(760 posts)It was my favorite.
PJMcK
(25,098 posts)Im so old their sign said they had sold thousands of burgers!
Coolgoober
(392 posts)While my Dad worked my mom would sometimes stop at McDonald's. It was her pay day and if groceries didn't go over her budget and we behaved she would take us there. Of course there were no drive thrus or indoor dining. There were five of us kids and we could each eat for less than 1$. It was a good time. Great memories
Some times us 3 boys would work at my grandfather's house/business ( not for money of course but a ton of life experience) and he would every now and again treat us and my dad to McDonald's. But he would only buy the burgers. They were 20 cents. He thought the fries and drinks were a rip off. We were always happy with the burgers.
Fresh_Start
(11,367 posts)I think they were my stepdads favorites
Bluestocking
(760 posts)It was my brothers favorite. Our parents never took us there. Do they have holes with onions in them.
debm55
(61,371 posts)debm55
(61,371 posts)johnp3907
(4,331 posts)debm55
(61,371 posts)OLDMDDEM
(3,248 posts)debm55
(61,371 posts)surrealAmerican
(11,919 posts)... Friendly's and KFC. With other kids, I either went to one of the local pizzerias, or a place in the mall that served gyros. That was my favorite; I loved gyros.
debm55
(61,371 posts)doc03
(39,142 posts)fries. The first fast food franchises I remember around here was Burger Chef and Elby's Big Boy. I think Pittsburgh's Eat &Park was originally Big Boy?
debm55
(61,371 posts)know,
ProfessorGAC
(77,154 posts)One was Burger Chef, which was a small chain in the south & southwest suburbs of Chicago.
The other was a place called The Cuckoo Clock.
The building actually had a big clock on the front & the little door opened and a bird came out on the hour.
My dad knew the guy who originally owned it. That guy brought the first McDonald's to our city of 65,000, and signed an exclusivity deal with McD's corporate.
He got right of first refusal on any new location within 25 miles.
Ended up with 15 or 16 McDonald stores, and got a royalty from 5 or 6 others.
Started out in a little walk up burger joint, became a multimillionaire by around 1975!
debm55
(61,371 posts)ProfessorGAC
(77,154 posts)It was a fast food joint for a LONG time, but when the clock stopped they never fixed it.
There's a CVS there now & a BK across the street.
When that place first opened, it would be packed at say 5-10 minutes before the hour so folks would be there when the clock hit top of hour. They probably did 90% of their business in that 10 minutes!
JMCKUSICK
(6,533 posts)LuvLoogie
(8,879 posts)Chicken Unlimited in the early 70s was awesome, too. A Chicago thing.
Oh, and any random hotdog cart.
LoisB
(13,307 posts)local drug store.
dhol82
(9,653 posts)Loved that place! Now, long gone. Life was simpler in the sixties.
moniss
(9,131 posts)One was "Dog 'n Suds" otherwise known as "Arf and Barf".
The A&W drive in was always good. Can't beat a place with carhops. There's still a big one in Oshkosh, Wisconsin that has hops on skates.
For a sit down place that was "fast food" we had the chain known as "George Webb". Thinnest hamburgers known to mankind. The grill and everything was more or less out in the open for customers to see. I got thrown out of one for making fun of their soup. The sign and the menu said chicken "flavored" noodle soup. I kept asking whether the "flavored" meant it didn't have any connection to real chicken or whether they just ran hot water through a whole chicken like on The 3 Stooges. A bowl of it was basically noodles, some dried parsley and the broth was a glowing neon yellow loaded with salt. Not a speck of chicken meat to be found. It had an "other worldly" smell and not like chicken at all.
But the George Webb was popular because they were open after bar time and you could get a cheap breakfast or those paper thin burgers. Being so thin they fried quickly on the grill and basically about 30 seconds or so per side and they were done. They used to have "bag" deals for "to go" orders. I think back in the early 80's you could get like 15 burgers for $10 or something like that.
"Dog 'n Suds" was a really cool drive-in chain because they had great root beer and in addition to burgers they had variations of hot dogs. Mostly they are gone now but there is still an independent one about an hour or so from me.
A&W of course is still around.
woodsprite
(12,587 posts)Aunts/Uncles and cousins dropped by.
Favorites:
Ginos - their burgers/fries
Roy Rogers - the fixins bar and strawberry shortcake cornbread!
Shakeys - pepperoni pizza