White Castle (restaurant)
This article reads like a press release or a news article and may be largely based on routine coverage. (May 2008) |
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Food |
Founded | Wichita, Kansas, USA, September 13, 1921 |
Headquarters | Columbus, Ohio |
Key people | Billy Ingram, Walter Anderson, Founders |
Products | Fast food, including hamburgers, french fries, and dairy desserts |
Website | www.whitecastle.com |
White Castle is the oldest American hamburger fast food restaurant chain. It is known for square burgers, sometimes referred to as "sliders" (officially spelled and trademarked as "Slyders").[1] They were priced at five cents until the 1940s, and remained at ten cents for years thereafter while growing smaller. For several years, when the original burgers sold for five cents, White Castle periodically ran promotional ads in local newspapers which contained coupons offering five burgers for ten cents, takeout only. The typical White Castle restaurant architecture features a white exterior with a crenelated tower at one corner to resemble a medieval castle. The Chicago Water Tower, which stands on Michigan Avenue's Magnificent Mile, is said to be the model for the classic building.
History
White Castle was founded in 1921 in Wichita, Kansas. Billy Ingram partnered with cook Walter Anderson to make White Castle into a chain of restaurants and market White Castle. At the time, Americans were hesitant to eat ground beef after Upton Sinclair's 1906 novel The Jungle had publicized the poor sanitation practices of the meat packing industry. Founders Edgar Waldo "Billy" Ingram and Walter Anderson set out to change the public's perception of the cleanliness of the industry. They constructed small buildings with hygenically white exteriors and stainless steel interiors, and outfitted their employees with spotless uniforms. Their first restaurants in Wichita, Kansas, were a success, and the company branched out into other midwestern markets, starting in 1923 with Omaha, Nebraska. White Castle Building No. 8, built in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1936, was an example of the chain's prefabricated porcelain buildings. The building measured 28 feet (8.5 m) by 28 feet (8.5 m) and was modeled after the Chicago Water Tower, with octagonal buttresses, crenellated towers, and a parapet wall.[2]
Anderson is credited with invention of "the kitchen as assembly line, and the cook as infinitely replaceable technician"[1], hence giving rise to modern fast food phenomenon. He had developed an efficient method for cooking hamburgers, using freshly ground beef and fresh onions. The ground beef was formed into balls by machine, eighteen to a pound, or forty per kilogram. The balls were placed upon a hot grill and topped with a handful of fresh thinly shredded onion. Then they were flipped so that the onion was under the ball. The ball was then squashed down, turning the ball into a very thin patty. The bottom of the bun was then placed atop the cooking patty with the other half of the bun on top of that so that the juices and steam from the beef and the onion would permeate the bun. After grilling, a slice of dill pickle was inserted before serving. Management decreed that any additives, such as ketchup or mustard, were to be added by the customer. Anderson's method is not in use by the chain today, having changed when the company switched from using fresh beef and fresh onion to small, frozen square patties (originally supplied by Swift & Co.) which are cooked atop a bed of dehydrated onions laid out on a grill. The heat and steam rises up from the grill, through the onions. In 1949, five holes in the patty were added to facilitate quick and thorough cooking. The very thin patties are not flipped throughout this process. This "steam grilled" method is unique among major fast food restaurants.
Since fast food was unknown in the United States in that era, there was no infrastructure to support the business, as is common with today's fast food restaurants. The company established centralized bakeries and warehouses to supply itself. It created a subsidiary, Paperlynen, to make paper products used in the restaurants. They also created a subsidiary named Porcelain Steel Buildings that manufactured movable, prefabricated structures that could be assembled at any White Castle restaurant site.[2]
The company also began publishing its own internal employee magazine, the "White Castle Official House Organ," on November 1, 1925. The bulk of the material was contributed by Castle personnel, mostly letters and photographs of workers, promotion announcements, 25-year milestones and retirements, etc., arranged by geographic area. "Employees could...read about the progress and innovations made by those in other Areas which made everyone aware of the entire System's direction and condition.".[3] The House Organ was published quarterly at least through the early 1980s and at some point was renamed "The Slyder Times." The Ohio Historical Society houses an extensive archive of White Castle System, Inc. records from 1921–1991, including issues dating from 1927 to 1970 of the White Castle House Organ.[4]
Ingram's business savvy, argues David Gerard Hogan in Selling 'Em By the Sack: White Castle and the Creation of American Food, not only was responsible for White Castle's success, but for the popularization of the hamburger. For example, to counter charges that burgers were not healthy, Ingram paid several young men to dress as doctors and eat White Castle hamburgers, the idea being that if doctors ate it, it had to be healthy. This same logic led Ingram to fund a study in which a University of Minnesota medical student went on a ten-week diet of nothing but White Castles and water. The experiment, though scientifically dubious, yielded results and increased legitimacy for the hamburger in general and White Castle in particular.
In 1933, Ingram bought out Anderson, and the following year the company moved corporate headquarters to Columbus, Ohio. The company remains privately held and its restaurants are company-owned; they are not franchised in the United States (international White Castle outlets are a different matter). Co-founder Billy Ingram was followed as head of the firm by his son E. W. Ingram, Jr. and grandson E. W. Ingram, III.
In concurrence with its 80th anniversary in 2001, White Castle started its Cravers' Hall of Fame. "Cravers" are inducted annually based on stories that are submitted about them, either for them by another person or by that particular Craver. Between five and ten stories have been chosen each year with a grand total of 64 stories being selected through the 2007 induction class, less than 1% of the total stories submitted since the inception of the Cravers' Hall of Fame.
Typically the breakfast menu is available from 5:00 AM until 10:30 AM, but some stores have attempted to boost overnight sales and start breakfast service as early as midnight. The regular menu is available 24 hours a day. (Some restaurants have started closing at 1 am on weeknights and only staying open all night on Friday and Saturday)
Locations
White Castle can be found in the following states in the United States:[5]
Many Southerners tend to compare White Castle's sliders with Krystal's square burgers. With the exception of Kentucky and Tennessee, the two restaurants' locations do not overlap geographically.
World's Largest White Castle
The world’s largest White Castle restaurant opened on February 15, 2008 in downtown Louisville, Kentucky. It has 3,270 square feet (304 m2) of space.[6]
Logos
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White Castle's original logo. Used from opening-2005
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The current White Castle logo. 2005-present
See also
- White Castle Building No. 8 - A historic White Castle located in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Similar restaurants:
- White Mana - similarly themed restaurant that was built at the 1939 New York World's Fair and relocated to New Jersey.
- Krystal - considered to be much like White Castle but for the Southern United States.
- Little Tavern - a similar chain in the Baltimore-Washington, D.C. area.
- White Tower Hamburgers [2] - founded in 1926 in Milwaukee
In popular culture:
- White Palace (film) - White Castle refused permission to use its name in either the novel or the film.
- Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle - A film in which White Castle did allow their trademarks to be used.
References
- ^ WhiteCastle.com WhiteCastle.com refers to their burgers as "slyders". WhiteCastle.com Burger Menu, June 2007. Retrieved June 15 2007.
- ^ a b Gardner, Denis P. (2004). Minnesota Treasures: Stories Behind the State's Historic Places. St. Paul, Minnesota: Minnesota Historical Society. ISBN 0-87351-471-8.
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(help) - ^ "History and Heritage of White Castle", White Castle Official House Organ, vol. 51, no. 1, p. 20, Spring, 1975
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(help)CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ Ohio Historical Society. "White Castle System, Inc. Records, 1921-1991". Retrieved 2007-08-23.
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- ^ http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200880214093
External links
- Articles needing cleanup from May 2008
- Articles with sections that need to be turned into prose from May 2008
- Resturants established in 1921
- Companies based in Wichita, Kansas
- Companies based in Columbus, Ohio
- Fast-food franchises
- Fast-food chains of the United States
- Fast-food hamburger restaurants
- Regional restaurant chains