BIG MAC SPECIAL SAUCE

Back in the summer of 2018, I treated myself to lunch from McDonald’s, and with my change, the cashier handed me this golden coin:

The Big Mac was 50 years old?  Had it really been 50 years of those two all-beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions, on a sesame seed bun?  What’s even more incredible to me is that only 1 out of 5 millennials have tasted a Big Mac.  Silly millennials.

I worked at McDonald’s when I was in high school.  It was exciting to get a McDonald’s franchise in our town (prior to that it was Hardee’s or nothing), and I was thrilled to have my first real non-babysitting job.  That excitement did not last much beyond my first week of work.  The manager — his name was Harry or Henry — was a little twit of a man, not many years older than me, with a stupid little black mustache, who clearly favored other teen employees over me.

I liked my job, even though I was not one of the cool kids.  (Yes, there was a clique among the teens working at McDonald’s — because in case you haven’t figured it out yet, middle school is never really over).  I learned that food had to be thrown out after sitting around for 30 minutes, and we were never ever to talk to union organizers.  Some nights I worked the shake station, and I’d go home polka-dotted with milkshake splatters.  Sometimes I assembled sandwiches, squirting special sauce out of something that looked like a caulking gun.  The job I liked the least was keeping the dining area and rest rooms clean — which Harry/Henry seemed to delight in assigning to me, not being one of the cool kids. But no matter which station I worked, my dog was happy to greet/hump me when I got home with my $1.25 worth of food in hand — our meal allowance that we could take at the end of our shift.

One day, Harry/Henry called me into his closet of an office.  He sat there in his yellow short-sleeved shirt and brown polyester slacks in his vinyl-covered wheel-a-throne, and informed me that I was being fired because I wasn’t “a McDonald’s person.”  Although he didn’t elaborate, he assured me that they had other employees who, despite not being McDonald’s people, had gone on to successful careers at Jack in the Box.  (Come to think of it, that might have been what I was told when I was laid off from my first law job at the Manhattan law firm.)  Although it was humiliating at the time, it prepared me for many more “you’re not a [fill in the blank] person” conversations in the years ahead.

I tried to find out what happened to Harry/Henry, but not surprisingly, my Google search for “Harry or Henry who was a manager at McDonald’s on Long Island in the 70s,” was not fruitful.

I harbor no ill will towards McDonald’s.  In fact, I still love a Big Mac once in a while.  According to my research, in 1967, a man running a McDonald’s franchise named Jim Delligatti was frustrated.  His customers at his Pittsburgh franchise were primarily steel workers with big appetites, but all he had to offer them was a regular cheeseburger.  He experimented in the kitchen, and came up with what is now known as the Big Mac.  He placed a center bun, known as the “club bun” between the patties to stabilize the sandwich.  (Ironically, the first thing I do when I get a Big Mac is remove the center bun, stability be damned.)  But what really made the sandwich unique was the “special sauce” he created.  With Ray Kroc’s blessing, the Big Mac was introduced systemwide in 1968.  Today, Americans consume 550 million Big Macs a year.

I found a few copycat recipes for Special Sauce on the interwebs, but none of them sounded right, and were really little more than thousand island dressing.  Then I found this recipe for Special Sauce, which is purportedly from the McDonald’s Manager’s Handbook published in 1969 (which presumably also informs managers how to terminate employees that are “not McDonald’s people”), to be used in the event of an emergency if a store ran out of the pre-made sauce (gasp!).  More out of curiosity than anything else, I prepared a batch of the McDonald’s Manager’s Handbook Special Sauce.

The ingredients include a parade of horribles, things I would normally never have in my refrigerator — Miracle Whip, bottled French salad dressing, sweet pickle relish:

I tried ordering a Big Mac with the special sauce on the side so that I could do a side-by-side comparison, but the cashier would not oblige me.  (I think maybe my face is on a “not a McDonald’s person” poster hanging in the break room.) So I scraped off what I could, and here’s the side-by-side:

Copycat on the left, real stuff on the right

I’m not sure if the real stuff has that much more relish than the copycat, or if that is just what I was able to scrape off. And?  Yeah, it’s on point– a little more orange than the OG, perhaps, but the taste was pretty darn close.  Even if you’re not a McDonald’s person, this is still awesome sauce.

BIG MAC SPECIAL SAUCE
Author: 
Recipe type: Sauces and Condiments
 
Ingredients
  • ¼ cup Miracle Whip
  • ¼ cup mayonnaise
  • 3 tablespoons Wishbone French salad dressing
  • ½ tablespoon Heinz sweet pickle relish
  • 1½ tablespoons Heinz dill pickle relish
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 teaspoon dried minced onion
  • 1 teaspoon white vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon ketchup
  • ⅛ teaspoon salt
Instructions
  1. In a medium microwave-safe container, mix all of the ingredients.
  2. Microwave on high power for 25 seconds, and stir well again.
  3. Cover and refrigerate at least 1 hour before serving. The sauce will keep covered in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.

 

 

MAIDA HEATTER’S DOUBLE CHOCOLATE WHOPPER COOKIES

Did you have a nice Father’s Day?  Ours was low-key, but both of our adult children were home for the weekend and that was special.  I kind of miss the days of making cards with the kids decorated with thumbprint animals — that period of our lives whooshed by in a blink.  But Jasper and Maisy, lacking thumbs, still require my assistance:

Even though he’s not my father, he’s the father of my children, and to celebrate his day I baked him a batch of Maida Heatter’s Double Chocolate Whopper Cookies, from her Book of Great American Desserts.  (I’m not sure if this is the exact recipe from her book, or just one of the many versions on the interwebs.)  They’re nothing new, but I’ve never made them before, and they seemed to have all the bells and whistles (or chips and nuts, as the case may be).  These are big, dense, chocolate-overloaded cookies, powered up with a little espresso powder, and are definitely special occasion cookies.  Happy Father’s Day!

5 from 1 reviews
MAIDA HEATTER'S DOUBLE CHOCOLATE WHOPPER COOKIES
Author: 
 
Ingredients
  • 4 ounces semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
  • 4 ounces bittersweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
  • 6 tablespoons butter, cut into pieces
  • ¼ cup flour
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ¼ teaspoon baking powder
  • 2 eggs
  • ¾ cup sugar
  • 2 teaspoons instant espresso powder
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 6 ounces dark chocolate chips
  • 1 cup coarsely chopped pecans
  • 1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper.
  2. Place the chopped chocolate and butter in a heatproof bowl set over a medium saucepan of simmering water (bottom of bowl should not touch water). Stir gently until melted and smooth. Remove bowl from heat and set aside to cool briefly.
  3. Whisk the flour, salt, and baking powder together in a small bowl.
  4. Place eggs, sugar, espresso powder, and vanilla in a large bowl and, using an electric mixer, beat on high speed for 2-3 minutes until light and well combined.
  5. Slowly add in the melted chocolate and beat on low speed until combined. Add the flour mixture and beat until incorporated. Stif in the chocolate chips and nuts.
  6. Use a ⅓-cup measure to scoop the dough into 6 mounds on each of the baking sheets, spacing evenly about 2 inches apart.
  7. Bake one sheet at a time on the center rack for 17 minutes -- tops of cookies should look dry and shiny. Allow to cool on sheet for 15 minutes, then transfer to wire racks to cool completely.

Mmmmm — chocolatey

Worthy of all the “World’s Best Dads” out there

The years sure whooshed by