Hey, look! It's another oddball thing Japan is doing with food! Specifically, Kit Kats, which, according to our extensive research, is Japan's very favorite food to mess with. Kit Kat Sandwiches!
Yup, a fast food joint in Japan is serving sandwiches made from Kit Kats. And not like "Kit Kats instead of bread" like KFC did with the Double Down. No! Kit Kats BETWEEN bread, like a real sandwich. If a sandwich filled with chocolate bars, whipped cream, and candied orange peel counts as "Real."**
**Our experts are willing to let this through on a technicality.
The fast food joint in question is First Kitchen, and the sandwich is made with the Kit Kat "For Cafe" line of candy, which is a thinner, crispier version of the chocolate candy, meant for dipping in hot beverages. Regardless, these sandwiches sell for about $1.80 US, which is a pretty cheap way to get a really really really fast sugar high.
Want to know about these Kit Kat Sandwiches? Read more over at Kotaku: http://goo.gl/25zVaV
How much would YOU pay for a Kit Kat Sandwich? Do you feel as though First Kitchen was tapping into one of your deep, secret cravings when it created the Kit Kat Sandwich? How much would you pay Noah to eat one of these on the show?
TELL US EVERYTHING!!!
Want to know what's going on with Food Feeder and Tasted in the future?
Follow us and Noah on Twitter for updates:
Noah: http://www.twitter.com/Galuten
Tasted: http://www.twitter.com/TastedChannel
Oh and we're on The Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TastedChannel
Tune in to the Food Feeder with Tasted's food guru, Noah Galuten. Noah's been there and done that in pretty much every aspect of the culinary scene from his stint as a popular food writer for LA Weekly to now opening his own highly anticipated BBQ restaurant. Hop on for the ride as Noah gives us the inside scoop on what's hot and happening in the world of fascinating food from breaking news, to awesome events, cool chefs, incredible restaurants and all around good eats. Noah's the guy for everything you ever wanted to know about food... and then some. Click subscribe to check out new episodes almost every day!
Yup, a fast food joint in Japan is serving sandwiches made from Kit Kats. And not like "Kit Kats instead of bread" like KFC did with the Double Down. No! Kit Kats BETWEEN bread, like a real sandwich. If a sandwich filled with chocolate bars, whipped cream, and candied orange peel counts as "Real."**
**Our experts are willing to let this through on a technicality.
The fast food joint in question is First Kitchen, and the sandwich is made with the Kit Kat "For Cafe" line of candy, which is a thinner, crispier version of the chocolate candy, meant for dipping in hot beverages. Regardless, these sandwiches sell for about $1.80 US, which is a pretty cheap way to get a really really really fast sugar high.
Want to know about these Kit Kat Sandwiches? Read more over at Kotaku: http://goo.gl/25zVaV
How much would YOU pay for a Kit Kat Sandwich? Do you feel as though First Kitchen was tapping into one of your deep, secret cravings when it created the Kit Kat Sandwich? How much would you pay Noah to eat one of these on the show?
TELL US EVERYTHING!!!
Want to know what's going on with Food Feeder and Tasted in the future?
Follow us and Noah on Twitter for updates:
Noah: http://www.twitter.com/Galuten
Tasted: http://www.twitter.com/TastedChannel
Oh and we're on The Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TastedChannel
Tune in to the Food Feeder with Tasted's food guru, Noah Galuten. Noah's been there and done that in pretty much every aspect of the culinary scene from his stint as a popular food writer for LA Weekly to now opening his own highly anticipated BBQ restaurant. Hop on for the ride as Noah gives us the inside scoop on what's hot and happening in the world of fascinating food from breaking news, to awesome events, cool chefs, incredible restaurants and all around good eats. Noah's the guy for everything you ever wanted to know about food... and then some. Click subscribe to check out new episodes almost every day!
Category
🛠️
Lifestyle