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On December 11, 2018, MTY signed a deal to acquire South St. Burger within 90 days. South St. had 26 franchises and 14 corporate restaurants at the time of the announcement. [94] The acquisition was completed in March 2019 for $4.1 million in cash. [95] MTY acquired Yuzu Sushi, a Quebec City-based sushi chain, in 2019. [96]
New York Fries is another Recipe Unlimited brand with about 200 stores in Canada, Hong Kong, UAE, Kuwait, and South Korea. New York Fries also had a burger company called South St. Burger, that sells burgers along with New York Fries and other products. It was spun off into a separate entity as part of the Cara acquisition.
A former Red Barn location in Mississauga, Ontario, now a Mr. Sub restaurant. This is a list of defunct fast-food chains.A restaurant chain is a set of related restaurants with the same name in many different locations that are either under shared corporate ownership (e.g., McDonald's in the U.S.) or franchising agreements.
To see how famous burger chains from each coast compared, I tried cheeseburgers from one West Coast-based and one East Coast-based chain: In-N-Out's iconic Double Double animal-style cheeseburger ...
Ingredients. 1 burger bun. 1/3 oz butter. 7 oz fresh ground Wagyu beef, formed into a patty. 3 slices fresh tomato. 2 pieces of Gem lettuce. 3 sweet pickles, sliced
South St. Burger would not be part of the acquisition. [21] On March 31, 2016, Cara Operations announced that it would acquire St-Hubert Chicken $537 million. [22] [23] On September 1, 2016, Cara Operations acquired Franworks Group, and its Original Joe's, State & Main, and Elephant & Castle brands. [24] In 2017, Cara acquired The Pickle Barrel.
The South Shore is home to some of the best burgers in the state, according to a new survey. The list was compiled by the group Taste of Massachusetts, which started with over 1,000 people ...
Burger Baron sign Burger Baron Cup. Burger Baron was founded in 1957 by Jack McDonnell. [2] It was founded in either Calgary or Lethbridge, Alberta (the location and ownership of the first site is disputed), Burger Baron was the first drive-in chain in Western Canada.