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  • These are McDonald's fries.

  • And this is everything that's in McDonald's fries.

  • Welcome to "Fast Food Chemistry."

  • So, this episode is a little different

  • because we're not just interested

  • in the current McDonald's fries,

  • but also the iconic original McDonald's fries,

  • which were introduced back in 1955.

  • We spent weeks working out what we think

  • is an almost exact recipe for the modern fries

  • and a recreation of the original fries,

  • which no one's had access to for 30 years.

  • I haven't had those since I was a kid,

  • so I too am going to test the original McDonald's recipe

  • to see if they're as good as I remember.

  • Let's get started.

  • We managed to track down a document online

  • which apparently contains

  • all of the original McDonald's recipes.

  • I too have the McMenu recipe,

  • with a few changes from Harry

  • to make it even closer to the original recipe.

  • The original recipe is potatoes, of course,

  • sugar, canola oil, corn syrup,

  • salt, and beef tallow.

  • I bought one of these,

  • 'cause it said it was 1.5 pounds.

  • I thought that, "Wow, that's a lot."

  • Turns out it's not a lot.

  • Oh. My helper has arrived.

  • When there are so few ingredients in fries,

  • there's one thing that makes a big difference,

  • and that's potatoes.

  • McDonald's primarily use russet Burbanks,

  • which we've managed to get our hands on today.

  • These are a specialist variety of potato

  • and as a consumer

  • are a little bit hard to come by in the UK.

  • This, of course, is a russet potato.

  • This looks exactly like what I think a potato looks like.

  • I don't know what the difference between this potato

  • and other brands or types of potatoes there are.

  • Whatever the difference is, I don't know it.

  • According to the recipe that we have,

  • they should be around a quarter of an inch thick

  • and 4 to 6 inches long.

  • Pew.

  • Almost 6 inches.

  • 5 inches, boom.

  • We'll do two potatoes.

  • Get the actual lumps of mud off of this one.

  • Water's going everywhere already. Good.

  • Washed.

  • This is how they do it in the Army, right?

  • If Gordon Ramsay could see this he'd blow a gasket.

  • We've gone to the extra effort

  • of getting one of these fry-cutting machines

  • so that we can get these nice

  • even quarter-inch-thick fries.

  • Here goes nothing.

  • Bang. Look at that.

  • That's pretty impressive, though.

  • Those look a lot like McDonald's fries.

  • Those look, yeah, pretty similar.

  • Check out this thing I got.

  • Here we go. [grunts]

  • [grunts] Come on.

  • [grunts]

  • So, when McDonald's are cutting their fries,

  • they fire potatoes through one of these grates

  • at 70 miles per hour.

  • Unfortunately, we do not have an enormous gas cannon,

  • so instead we just have me.

  • Come on.

  • Then we just need to soak them and refrigerate them.

  • So, to roughly 2 cups of hot water

  • I'm going to be adding a quarter cup of sugar

  • and 2 tablespoons of corn syrup.

  • 2 tablespoons.

  • Yep, perfect.

  • Oh, [beeps].

  • This says "with vanilla."

  • Doesn't smell like vanilla.

  • Well, this is the one we're using.

  • All right, fries going in.

  • I'm going to put as many as I can

  • until this thing is, like, overflowing fries.

  • Whew, that's heavy.

  • Now it's time for the beef tallow.

  • It's quite, like, an old-fashioned thing.

  • I think my grandma used to cook things in beef tallow,

  • or beef dripping, as it's sometimes called.

  • Wow, that is very white.

  • Pure, pure white.

  • It looks like icing for a cake or something.

  • But probably tastes quite different.

  • It's like wax, like candle wax.

  • Doesn't have a very strong smell to it.

  • Maybe slightly beefy.

  • Doesn't really taste of anything.

  • It's just kind of a little bit chewy

  • and a little bit greasy, as you can imagine.

  • For those who don't know,

  • beef tallow is kind of the fat from the beef.

  • So when they're butchering up a cow,

  • they'll carve off the lumps of fat,

  • they'll kind of render them down to melt them down,

  • and then let it solidify again,

  • and this is what you're left with.

  • What?

  • So, this is beef tallow, right?

  • And what I understand

  • is that this is just rendered fat they use to cook, right?

  • Did you know anything about that?

  • I had never heard of this either.

  • Oh, yeah. What did he say the consistency of this is?

  • That this is like frosting?

  • Doesn't really smell like anything.

  • I mean, it has an odor, but I don't ...

  • I mean, very mild flavor.

  • It tastes blank, if that makes sense.

  • Now we have to find a way to melt this down into that.

  • It's like cutting the world's greasiest birthday cake.

  • Oh, wow. That's cool.

  • Theirs is like a big block of cheese.

  • This is our beef tallow.

  • Formula 47, 6 cups of beef tallow.

  • All right.

  • Why?

  • And then half a cup of canola oil.

  • If my mom cooked a beef Sunday roast,

  • it would smell like this throughout the house,

  • which, to me, fantastic.

  • Time to dry our fries.

  • This seems like what I'm supposed to do, correct?

  • Here we go.

  • Let's take these out.

  • We'll let them cool for 10 minutes

  • and then cook them again.

  • This is our system. All right.

  • Oof.

  • Yeah, my boys are soggo.

  • Get these guys back in there.

  • Watch out, Cats Domino, this stuff is hot.

  • And we're going to toss it with some salt.

  • And there we are. We have old-style McDonald's fries.

  • No one in this room has ever actually

  • tried the original recipe, until now.

  • A one, and a two, and a three. Yoop.

  • I don't know if this is the right kind of salt.

  • That might have been too much.

  • Harry: Obviously, I have to try one of these

  • while they're still warm.

  • These are regular McDonald's fries, the now fries.

  • Now the original "Fast Food Chemistry" fries.

  • OK, wow. That's really, really good.

  • You really do taste the beef.

  • I've never had a McDonald's fry like that before,

  • and I actually think I might prefer that

  • to what we have right now.

  • These are way better.

  • I might have oversalted them, but it doesn't matter.

  • Further testing required.

  • I mean, these are fantastic.

  • I gotta say, I think I get it.

  • I think I get why people miss these so much.

  • These are so flavorful.

  • It's kind of surprising, because the tallow itself

  • didn't have that much of a strong smell or a strong taste,

  • but I think when you cook it, it really kind of

  • brings out that rich flavor and imparts it onto the fry.

  • They don't taste beefy.

  • That's what I was expecting, right?

  • I was expecting, like, a beef flavor

  • that maybe I just didn't realize

  • they had it until they changed it.

  • But they're just way more flavorful.

  • I don't know if this is the same with the US right now,

  • but in the UK, when you buy fries from McDonald's,

  • they really don't have much flavor to them.

  • You kind of have to dip them in either ketchup

  • or barbecue sauce to get any kind of flavor whatsoever.

  • I think the highest compliment I can pay to these

  • is that I would happily eat this whole thing

  • without any dip at all.

  • I might be speaking too soon,

  • but I think we need to start the official campaign

  • to bring back the beef.

  • These compared to the now McDonald's fries,

  • these just taste, like, flatter.

  • They taste like they're missing something.

  • These guys, oh, man, these are so good.

  • Harry: These are the only McDonald's fries

  • anyone under the age of around 35 will have experienced,

  • and the ingredients list is quite different.

  • When McDonald's changed the fries recipe in 1990,

  • it replaced the beef tallow with something

  • that actually turned out to be worse for you:

  • trans fats.

  • They changed the oil recipe again in 2002

  • to try and eliminate them,

  • but when this didn't work,

  • they tried again in 2007.

  • Now McDonald's says

  • their fries are completely trans-fat-free,

  • and it's achieved this through a mixture of canola oil,

  • corn oil, soybean oil, and hydrogenated soybean oil.

  • But what's the difference between those last two?

  • Hydrogenation, as the name suggests,

  • is the addition of hydrogen.

  • But when it comes to oils,

  • that makes a big difference.

  • Hydrogenation is useful for extending the shelf life of oils

  • or changing their consistency.

  • It's how margarine is made.

  • Effectively, McDonald's has to carry out

  • a complicated chemical process on its oil

  • to change something like this

  • into something resembling beef tallow.

  • There's one problem, though.

  • If this reaction isn't perfect,

  • you end up with trans fats.

  • These molecules may look extremely similar,

  • but it makes a huge difference to your health.

  • Trans fats increase your bad cholesterol

  • and can massively increase the risk

  • of heart attacks and strokes.

  • Yeah, I remember that.

  • I don't know anything about trans fat,

  • I don't know what they are, why they're bad,

  • but it was the talking point for a while.

  • Should I look it up?

  • Eh.

  • We can actually make our own hydrogenated soybean oil,

  • but I've been told I'm not allowed to do that

  • because it would involve bringing a tank

  • of flammable hydrogen into the studio.

  • Sad.

  • Yeah, don't do that. Don't bring a tank

  • of flammable hydrogen into the studio, please.

  • It has thickened it.

  • So that's the oils that the fries are cooked in covered,

  • but there's one other thing that changes them,

  • and that's the natural beef flavor.

  • Here's where things get tricky,

  • because McDonald's will not disclose

  • what's in their natural beef flavor.

  • They won't even tell us

  • if it's meat-based or a vegetarian alternative.

  • McDonald's previously got in trouble

  • for not disclosing that they did have beef in them

  • and had to pay $10 million worth in damages

  • and issue an apology.

  • We got our hands on two

  • very different-looking beef flavorings

  • to give them a try.

  • "Beef-flavoring taste test."

  • Oh, no.

  • I don't really trust this one,

  • 'cause it's in a very, very blue bottle

  • and it looks very medicinal,

  • but I also don't trust this one,

  • because the label is printed really badly,

  • and it smells so strongly of something.

  • I was not able to get beef flavoring

  • at the time that we shot this video,

  • and to be honest, I'm glad.

  • That stuff looks nasty.

  • This says it's a "unsweetened beef oil,"

  • but it says, "Take one tablespoon one to four times a day."

  • I'm not sure who's eating a tablespoon of this.

  • I don't think I'd even eat a drop of this.

  • Says it can be mixed with coffee, shakes, or for baking.

  • This stuff does not smell good. Jeez.

  • I'm going to, in the name of science,

  • try one drop of this horrible-smelling beef stuff.

  • Going to make my hand smell of beef.

  • [Harry coughing]

  • Joe: Harry, take it easy, man.

  • Oh, God.

  • That's so bad!

  • What is in that?

  • [Harry retching]

  • Holy -- I think he's throwing up!

  • I think he's throwing up! Harry: Jesus Christ.

  • Man!

  • And that goes in these.

  • What is in that? That's horrible!

  • The way in which it kind of attacked my throat,

  • I've never experienced anything like that before.

  • Oh, that's nasty.

  • That's going nowhere near our fries.

  • That leaves us with this one.

  • I'd say it can't be worse,

  • but I really don't want to tempt fate.

  • It smells better, but not good.

  • That actually does smell quite beefy.

  • I don't know what that one smells of, but it wasn't beef.

  • Still doing just a tiny amount.

  • Joe: Oh, my God. OK. Harry: It's not good.

  • Doesn't look as offensive as the first one.

  • My breath is going to smell of beef

  • for about six weeks after this.

  • It's not good, but it's much, much better than that one.

  • So this is going to go in our fries.

  • This whole area just smells horrific now

  • thanks to that f---ing oil.

  • So, there are a few steps here

  • to get the perfect modern fry.

  • By the time McDonald's fries arrive at the restaurant,

  • they've already been on quite a journey.

  • The first step is to slice them

  • and put them in an ingredients bath

  • with the dextrose and the sodium acid pyrophosphate.

  • This is a preservative that's used

  • to preserve the color and stop them going brown.

  • Then they go through a machine called the blancher,

  • which sprays them with water

  • at 75 degrees Celsius for 15 minutes

  • to activate an enzyme called pectin methylesterase

  • that strengthens the cell walls

  • and gives the potatoes a firmer texture.

  • I don't like how science-y these get.

  • Like, how science-y this one is compared to the first one,

  • 'cause those first fries were awesome.

  • And now, in order to make it healthy,

  • they added all this other junk.

  • I don't even know what he's talking about anymore.

  • Say when.

  • I mean, the process looks pretty much the same

  • as what we did the original recipe,

  • plus he's just dumping all these chemicals in.

  • I mean, I can't hate on them,

  • 'cause I'm eating them right now.

  • Oh, the smell is immediate. Whoa!

  • So, now we've part-fried them in our blended beefy oil.

  • At this point, McDonald's would normally freeze them

  • before sending them out to other McDonald's stores,

  • where the cooking process would be completed.

  • Since we've already got the fries,

  • we're just going to put them straight back in the fryer

  • for their second cook.

  • So, here we have it. We have our modern-day

  • American McDonald's fries.

  • First impressions: As you can imagine,

  • they look very much like McDonald's fries.

  • The color is there, the shape is there,

  • and they got the kind of texture as well.

  • Those both look exactly like McDonald's fries.

  • Harry, you knocked it out of the park with this one, man.

  • I will say they probably don't smell

  • as good as the beef tallow fries did.

  • We did put that substitute beef flavoring in there,

  • but to me, it doesn't come through as strongly

  • and it's just not as pleasant.

  • The last thing to do is of course give them a taste

  • to see just how accurately McDonald's has been able

  • to recreate beef without using beef.

  • I'm gonna be honest with you,

  • these are night and day. These are completely different.

  • And in all honesty, I much prefer the beef version.

  • I get almost no actual beef flavor from these.

  • You get a little bit on the nose

  • kind of when you smell them,

  • but when you actually taste them,

  • it's just a potato and the salt.

  • It just feels like McDonald's have gone to

  • an insane amount of extra steps to create a worse product.

  • I kind of wish I never tasted these now,

  • because McDonald's fries to me

  • will always now be living up to this bar,

  • and it's a high bar.

  • I totally agree with Harry.

  • The beef tallow original recipe,

  • far eclipse in flavor.

  • That's not to say that these fries aren't really good.

  • I mean, I've been snacking on them the whole shoot.

  • But the beef tallow ones are just incredible.

  • It's way better.

  • That said, you guys should still consider yourselves lucky,

  • because at least you're not eating British McDonald's fries,

  • which are literally potatoes, salt, and oil,

  • and taste like sadness.

  • British fries are OK if you get them

  • straight out of the fryer and heavily salted,

  • but as soon as you leave them for a few seconds,

  • you end up with this pallid soggy mess.

  • Normally with this show,

  • we like to say don't try this at home,

  • but, honestly, if you can get your hands

  • on some beef tallow, give these fries a try.

  • Maybe we can convince McDonald's to bring back the beef.

  • Hey, if you enjoyed this episode, we have others,

  • like Harry trying to recreate popcorn chicken from KFC.

These are McDonald's fries.

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