This past weekend, a thread was made in Reddit by fast food workers providing recommendations on what to avoid and various horror stories. Has anyone here worked at some fast food joints/restaurants? What are some things we should avoid? 
Reddit Link: Fast food workers of Reddit, what is the one menu option at your employment that you would recommend people never eat? (Because of cooking safety, cleanliness, unhealthy, etc) : AskReddit
KFC
Arby's
McDonald's

Reddit Link: Fast food workers of Reddit, what is the one menu option at your employment that you would recommend people never eat? (Because of cooking safety, cleanliness, unhealthy, etc) : AskReddit
KFC
KFC: The Coleslaw
I'm sure it's fine, but after seeing how it's made I have no desire to eat it. You grab a big bucket. Dump in the bag of lettuce and whatever else. Then dump in the bag of "I have no idea what this yellow goo is, but it kind of looks like snot". Make sure you squeeze out any left in the bag. Put on some gloves and mix it all up.
I can't eat the coleslaw without thinking about that goo bag.
Edit: Just to be clear, the goo bag wasn't mayo. It was... something other than mayo. I'm sure it's perfectly healthy it just didn't look very appetizing.
Arby's
I worked at Arby's for a summer. During a particularly slow day I decided to read the nutrition facts chart that they have. Out of curiosity I decided to see which menu item had the greatest amount of sodium content.
A large 6-piece mozzarella sticks.
Those 6 fukkers collectively have over 2000mg of sodium. That's not milligrams anymore, that's just fukking grams.
McDonald's
The McRib. After working 2 years at a McDonalds, I can say that one should really never eat a McRib. Here's why:
The McRib is cooked just like any other Mcd's sandwich. We set the grill for "McRib", lay the meat on the grill, and it gets pressed down for probably about 2 minutes and is finished cooking. The difference, however, is that the next step isn't like the rest.
Instead of putting it in the heating trays like the other meats, so it stays fresh and the time of freshness is tracked by our nifty little timer for each heating tray slot, it goes directly into a small vat of barbecue sauce.
And sits there.
No timer, no way of monitoring how long its been in there. Nothing. We pick em out with our tongs, slap it on a bun, and send it out. When we assume we're low in the vat, we put more in there. In other words, you could easily get a McRib patty that has been sitting in BBQ sauce for over an hour, underneath all the new-ish pattys.



I bet this shyt right here could kill my mother in one sitting.




