Crossword clues for kfc
kfc
- Restaurant chain represented by the Colonel
- Prominent poultry purveyor
- Place with a bucket list?
- Place to order a bucket
- Place for food in a bucket, informally
- Place for a bucket of food
- Pizza Hut sister brand
- Org. with a Double Down sandwich
- One of the Yum! brands
- Maker of a dish Patton Oswalt called a "failure pile in a sadness bowl"
- Louisville-based fast-food company
- Letters on buckets
- Letters for Col. Sanders
- Largest fast-food chain in China
- Inits. on a bucket of food
- Food-chain letters
- Fast-food co. serving buckets
- Fast-food chain with buckets
- Fast-food chain with a goateed spokesman
- Fast-food chain HQ'd in Louisville
- Fast-food chain founded by Colonel Sanders
- Fast food restaurant where you could get a 12-piece bucket meal
- Fast food inits
- Fast food initials
- Fast food chain whose new ads feature Reba McEntire as Colonel Sanders
- Fast food chain whose name is an acronym
- Fast food chain that sometimes serves food in buckets
- Fast food chain that offers Nashville Hot Chicken
- Fast food chain founded by Harlan Sanders
- Double Down sandwich maker
- Double Down chain
- Crispy Twister seller
- Crispy Colonel Sandwich seller
- Crispy Colonel Combo seller
- Colonel Sanders's fried chicken chain
- Colonel Sanders's fast food chain
- Colonel Sanders' co
- Col. Saunders treat
- Col. Sanders's letters
- Col. Sanders's company
- Col. Sanders' specialty
- Col. Sanders' Co
- Col. Sanders place
- Chain with wings
- Chain with Popcorn Nuggets
- Chain with pieces, briefly
- Chain with an Extra Crispy option
- Chain whose website has a "Find a Colonel Near You" feature
- Chain that dropped its full name in 1991
- Chain selling buckets
- Chain restaurant based in Louisville
- Chain offering meals in buckets
- Business for Sanders supporters?
- Bucket source
- Bucket chain
- Big seller of buckets
- $5 Fill Ups chain
- "Original, crispy or grilled?" co
- "Original or crispy?" org
- "Finger-lickin' good" food establishment
- "Finger lickin' good" sloganeer, and a hint to this puzzle's theme
- "Finger lickin' good" restaurant chain
- "___ No Longer Permitted To Use Word 'Eat' In Advertisements": Onion headline
- 'Original or crispy' chain
- Col. Sanders's place
- Popular fast-food chain
- Fast-food inits.
- Popeye's alternative, briefly
- Fast food inits.
- The Colonel's restaurant inits.
- Its logo is a goateed man in an apron
- Crispy Twister sandwich offerer
- Restaurant chain headquartered in Louisville
- "Original or crispy" offerer
- Restaurant with wings
- Letters on a bucket
- Col. Sanders's restaurant
- Chain attached to buckets?
- Crispy Twister offerer
- Company with a bucket list?
- Colonel's charge, once
- Louisville-based restaurant chain
- Sister of Pizza Hut
- Where you might exchange tender for tenders
- Purveyor of the Doublicious sandwich
- Preparer of fast food that's "finger-lickin' good"
- One of the brands of Yum! Brands
- Colonel's chain
- Col. Sanders's chain
- "Finger-lickin' good" restaurant"
- Fast-food franchise that started in S. Salt Lake, Ut.
- The Colonel's restaurant inits
- Popeye's rival
- Taco Bell alternative
- Popeyes rival
- Fast-food inits
- Where you may leave with a bucket
- The Colonel's company, initially
- Seller of the Crispy Colonel Sandwich
- Seller of buckets
- Popeyes competitor
- Place where drumsticks are often picked up
- Col. Sanders' outfit
- Col. Sanders' legacy
- Co. known for breasts and legs
- Chain with meals in buckets
- Bucket letters
- Yum! Brands subsidiary
- The Colonel's restaurant
- The Colonel's fast-food chain, briefly
- The Colonel's chain
- The Colonel's business, initially
- The Col.'s chain
- Tender vendor
- Taco Bell sister brand
- Sponsor of the Lifetime mini-movie "A Recipe for Seduction"
- Source of $5 Fill Ups
- Seller of fast food in buckets
- Seller of Famous Bowls
- Seller of Colonel's Crispy Strips
- Seller of Chicken Littles
- Seller of $5 Fill Ups
- Sanders' franchise
- Sanders org
- Restaurant with the Double Down sandwich
- Restaurant where you can choose Original Recipe or Extra Crispy
- Restaurant founded by Colonel Sanders
Wikipedia
Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) is a fast food restaurant chain that specializes in fried chicken and is headquartered in Louisville, Kentucky, United States. It is the world's second largest restaurant chain (as measured by sales) after McDonald's, with almost 20,000 locations globally in 123 countries and territories . The company is a subsidiary of Yum! Brands, a restaurant company that also owns the Pizza Hut and Taco Bell chains.
KFC was founded by Harland Sanders, an entrepreneur who began selling fried chicken from his roadside restaurant in Corbin, Kentucky, during the Great Depression. Sanders identified the potential of the restaurant franchising concept, and the first "Kentucky Fried Chicken" franchise opened in Utah in 1952. KFC popularized chicken in the fast food industry, diversifying the market by challenging the established dominance of the hamburger. By branding himself as "Colonel Sanders", Harland became a prominent figure of American cultural history, and his image remains widely used in KFC advertising. However, the company's rapid expansion overwhelmed the aging Sanders and, in 1964, he sold it to a group of investors led by John Y. Brown, Jr. and Jack C. Massey.
KFC was one of the first fast food chains to expand internationally, opening outlets in Canada, the United Kingdom, Mexico, and Jamaica by the mid-1960s. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, KFC experienced mixed fortunes domestically, as it went through a series of changes in corporate ownership with little or no experience in the restaurant business. In the early 1970s, KFC was sold to the spirits distributor Heublein, who were taken over by the R.J. Reynolds food and tobacco conglomerate, who sold the chain to PepsiCo. The chain continued to expand overseas however, and in 1987 KFC became the first Western restaurant chain to open in China. The chain has since expanded rapidly in China, which is now the company's single largest market. PepsiCo spun off its restaurants division as Tricon Global Restaurants, which later changed its name to Yum! Brands.
KFC's original product is pressure fried chicken pieces, seasoned with Sanders' recipe of 11 herbs and spices. The constituents of the recipe represent a notable trade secret. Larger portions of fried chicken are served in a cardboard "bucket", which has become a well known feature of the chain since it was first introduced by franchisee Pete Harman in 1957. Since the early 1990s, KFC has expanded its menu to offer other chicken products such as chicken fillet burgers and wraps, as well as salads and side dishes, such as French fries and coleslaw, desserts, and soft drinks, the latter often supplied by PepsiCo. KFC is known for its former and current slogan "Finger Lickin' Good", which was replaced by "Nobody does chicken like KFC" and "So good" in the interim.
KFC, formerly Kentucky Fried Chicken, chain of fast-food restaurants based in Louisville, Kentucky, US
KFC may also refer to: