Fast Food Stocks List

Fast Food Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jun 21 DPZ Pizza King Domino's Stock Eyes Buy Point As Earnings Sharply Accelerate
Jun 21 QSR McDonald's Announces $5 Value Meal As It Looks To Win Back Customers: 'We're Committed To Winning The Value War'
Jun 20 QSR Restaurant Brands goes ex dividend tomorrow
Jun 20 EBF Ennis (NYSE:EBF) Will Pay A Dividend Of $0.25
Jun 20 QSR Restaurant Brands: Well Positioned To Stand Out In The 'Value War'
Jun 20 LOCO El Pollo Loco Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ:LOCO) Shares Could Be 32% Below Their Intrinsic Value Estimate
Jun 20 WING Will Wingstop (WING) Face Challenges of Rising Costs and Competition?
Jun 20 WING Modern Fast Food Q1 Earnings: Wingstop (NASDAQ:WING) Simply the Best
Jun 19 WING 3 Reasons Growth Investors Will Love Wingstop (WING)
Jun 19 EBF Top Dividend Stocks To Consider In June 2024
Jun 19 EBF Ennis First Quarter 2025 Earnings: EPS: US$0.41 (vs US$0.45 in 1Q 2024)
Jun 19 JJSF Shelf-Stable Food Stocks Q1 Recap: Benchmarking J&J Snack Foods (NASDAQ:JJSF)
Jun 19 DPZ AI, the hot topping to improve your pizza
Jun 18 DPZ Domino's® Announces Q2 2024 Earnings Webcast
Jun 18 DK Top 3 Energy Stocks Which Could Rescue Your Portfolio In June
Jun 18 QSR Restaurant Brands International to Report Second Quarter 2024 Results on August 8, 2024
Jun 17 WING Has Groupon (GRPN) Outpaced Other Retail-Wholesale Stocks This Year?
Jun 17 EBF Ennis GAAP EPS of $0.41, revenue of $103.1M beats by $2.25M
Jun 17 EBF Ennis, Inc. Reports Results for the Quarter Ended May 31, 2024 and Declares Quarterly Dividend
Jun 16 QSR The latest value meals for the value-conscious consumer
Fast Food

Fast food is a type of mass-produced food designed for commercial resale and with a strong priority placed on "speed of service" versus other relevant factors involved in culinary science. Fast food was originally created as a commercial strategy to accommodate the larger numbers of busy commuters, travelers and wage workers who often did not have the time to sit down at a public house or diner and wait for their meal. By making speed of service the priority, this ensured that customers with strictly limited time (a commuter stopping to procure dinner to bring home to their family, for example, or an hourly laborer on a short lunch break) were not inconvenienced by waiting for their food to be cooked on-the-spot (as is expected from a traditional "sit down" restaurant). For those with no time to spare, fast food became a multibillion-dollar industry.
The fastest form of "fast food" consists of pre-cooked meals kept in readiness for a customer's arrival (Boston Market rotisserie chicken, Little Caesars pizza, etc.), with waiting time reduced to mere seconds. Other fast food outlets, primarily the hamburger outlets (McDonald's, Burger King, etc.) use mass-produced pre-prepared ingredients (bagged buns & condiments, frozen beef patties, prewashed/sliced vegetables, etc.) but take great pains to point out to the customer that the "meat and potatoes" (hamburgers and french fries) are always cooked fresh (or at least relatively recently) and assembled "to order" (like at a diner).
Although a vast variety of food can be "cooked fast", "fast food" is a commercial term limited to food sold in a restaurant or store with frozen, preheated or precooked ingredients, and served to the customer in a packaged form for take-out/take-away.
Fast food restaurants are traditionally distinguished by their ability to serve food via a drive-through. Outlets may be stands or kiosks, which may provide no shelter or seating, or fast food restaurants (also known as quick service restaurants). Franchise operations that are part of restaurant chains have standardized foodstuffs shipped to each restaurant from central locations.Fast food began with the first fish and chip shops in Britain in the 1860s. Drive-through restaurants were first popularized in the 1950s in the United States. The term "fast food" was recognized in a dictionary by Merriam–Webster in 1951.Eating fast food has been linked to, among other things, colorectal cancer, obesity, high cholesterol, and depression. Many fast foods tend to be high in saturated fat, sugar, salt and calories.The traditional family dinner is increasingly being replaced by the consumption of takeaway fast food. As a result, the time invested on food preparation is getting lower, with an average couple in the United States spending 47 minutes and 19 seconds per day on food preparation in 2013.

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