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McDonald's salad and Panera Bread sandwich
Cheapism, Pamera Bread, SStajic/istockphoto

It’s happening — again. Taco Bell’s popular Mexican Pizza came back for the second time in 2022. Fans ate the fast-food chain out of the item in only a few weeks when it was first brought back in May of that year.

Made with seasoned beef, beans, pizza sauce, cheese, and tomatoes layered between two crispy flour tortillas, the stacked taco-pizza hybrid can be ordered without meat, making it a tasty option for vegetarians. The Mexican Pizza is one fast-food item we’re happy to see return, but there are even more that we’re still rooting for. (We’re talking to you, McDonald’s snack wrap.)

Related: The Best Fast Food Deals to Grab This Month

Taco Bell Mexican Pizza

Taco Bell

The Mexican Pizza is came back to Taco Bell in 2022. The beloved menu item was axed during the pandemic, then brought back in May 2022 after droves of fans demanded its return. But Taco Bell underestimated the demand — seven times higher than before — and sold out within weeks because of supply issues. The fast-food chain says the popular item is now permanently back on its menu, and the supply issues have been resolved

Related: Live Más: Spicy Secrets Behind Taco Bell’s Success

Panera Toasted Frontega Chicken

Panera Bread Toasted Frontega Chicken
Panera Bread

It only took a few months for Panera to reverse course on its cult-favorite Frontega Chicken sandwich. After the bakery-cafe chain cut it from the menu earlier this year, the restaurant saw a 300% increase in mentions of the sandwich across social channels — which is corporate speak for “people were really mad.” So with a mea culpa Tweet, Panera has brought back the fan favorite, which features smoked chicken, mozzarella, tomato, red onion, basil, and chipotle sauce.

Related: The Most Over-the-Top Fast Food of the Past 10 Years

McDonald’s Szechuan Sauce

Szechuan Sauce
© McDonald’s

McDonald’s created a limited-time Szechuan McNugget sauce to promote the 1998 animated film “Mulan.” Helped by an appearance in the cartoon “Rick and Morty,” it became an intense cult favorite and has returned only a few times since its initial debut. (A limited run in 2017 even ended with police called to quell angry crowds demanding the sauce, which was in short supply.) The elusive sauce recently made another limited-time comeback in March 2022, but it was only available for a few days.

Chipotle Smoked Brisket

Chipotle: Smoked Beef Brisket
Chipotle

Chipotle discontinued its smoked brisket in November 2021, only two months after it became available. The item was taken off the menu earlier than expected, according to CNN. The brisket was met with largely positive reviews, and Chipotle says it was pleased with the rollout and will “probably do brisket again at some point in the future,” CEO Brian Niccol said. Phew.

McDonald’s Salads, Bagels, and Yogurt Parfaits

McDonalds Salad
©TripAdvisor

During the pandemic, McDonald’s pared down its menu to make it easier to dish out drive-thru orders. Some items returned, such as vanilla cones, chocolate chip cookies, two variations of the Quarter Pounder, and the Bacon McDouble, but some don’t have a return date beyond “possibly sometime.” If you were hoping to grab a salad, yogurt parfait, or bagel at your nearest Mickey D’s, you may have to wait a long, long time.

McDonald’s McHotdog

McHotDog Mega Sausage ((Western)) by elleooi2 ((CC BY))

McDonald’s offered hot dogs in some U.S. markets during the 1990s, but the item failed to appeal to enough customers. Maybe it had something to do with what McDonald’s founder Ray Kroc said in his autobiography: “There’s no telling what’s inside a hot dog’s skin, and our standard of quality just wouldn’t permit that kind of item.” Tell that to the U.S. consumers who eat 7 billion hot dogs between Memorial Day and Labor Day alone, according to the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council, which says food carts and hipsters have made dogs trendy again.

Burger King Burger Shots

Burger King Burger Shots
Burger King Burger Shots by Gustav H ((CC BY))

Burger King hasn’t figured out selling tiny burgers. It tried sliders (1987), then slightly bigger burgers called Burger Buddies (1990), and finally six-packs of mini burgers called Burger Shots (2009). None caught on, yet sliders are a huge deal at White Castle and other eateries.

McDonald’s Hula Burger

Hula Burger
Hula Burger by Alexboz97 ((CC BY-SA))

Along with the Filet-O-Fish, McDonald’s introduced founder Ray Kroc’s Hawaiian-inspired “Hula Burger” — grilled pineapple with cheese on top. It’s no surprise the Filet-O-Fish won that popularity contest, but it’d be interesting to have a sample of what’s probably fast food’s only attempt at grilled fruit.

Taco Bell Bell Beefer

Taco Bell

Designed to compete with burger chains, the Bell Beefer was essentially a ground-beef taco on a bun: a Tex-Mex sloppy joe. It was popular, offered from the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s. A Facebook group named Taco Bell Please Bring back the Bell Beefer patiently awaits its return.

Wendy’s Fresh Stuffed Pitas

NightAndDayImages/istockphoto

Filled with fresh vegetables and chunks of chicken, these were developed as healthier alternatives to the restaurant’s signature cheeseburgers and milkshakes. Wendy’s founder Dave Thomas called the wraps a “win-win situation,” but a lack of demand eventually knocked them off the menu.

McDonald’s McDLT

McDonald’s McDLT by Bluquail ((CC BY-SA))

The company enlisted Jason Alexander (before “Seinfeld”) to promote this sandwich, introduced in 1985 in a special two-section styrofoam container that kept hot and cold ingredients separate. Aside from the hassle of getting a deconstructed burger, the containers weren’t exactly environmentally friendly, but fans appreciated the hefty serving of toppings, such as lettuce and tomato. The McDLT had a sort-of return in 2011, called the Big and Tasty.

Burger King Funnel Cake Sticks

Funnel Cake Sticks by Jenny ((CC BY-NC-ND))

Burger King used to offer a bit of carnival nostalgia from 2009 to 2010 with its Funnel Cake Sticks, which were basically fried batter with powdered sugar and a sugary dipping sauce. This item wasn’t exactly healthy, but it was a steal at only $1.50 a pack. The sticks were reintroduced for a brief time in 2019 for $1.99 a pack.

Pizza Hut Taco Pizza

Taco Pizza by Chris Coyier ((CC BY-ND))

In 1979, Pizza Hut explained the complicated idea behind its Taco Pizza with a commercial that told viewers seven times that: “It’s a pizza-looking, taco-tasting pizza.” Pizza Hut’s foray into Mexican cuisine didn’t win over enough customers at the time, but now Mexican food is bigger than ever.

McDonald’s Salad Shakers

SStajic/istockphoto

The name explains it all: Put salad in a cup, top it with dressing, and shake well. It’s kind of a wonder that Shakers, introduced in 2000, aren’t around today, with mason-jar salads all over food blogs and Instagram. Not to mention that this has to be the easiest way to prepare and eat a salad. The Facebook group “Bring back the McDonald’s Salad Shaker” has 1,700 followers and counting.

Taco Bell Seafood Salad

frozen shrimp
panchof/istockphoto

To compete against McDonald’s Filet-O-Fish, Taco Bell developed a Seafood Salad that mixed whitefish, snow crab, and shrimp in a taco bowl. The chain even put out a snarky commercial trying to make the Filet-O-Fish look gross, but fish from Taco Bell was a hard sell in 1986. Now that fish tacos are everywhere, it might be time for Taco Bell to dive back into seafood.

KFC Double Down

KFC’s Double Down by Michael Saechang ((CC BY-SA))

Decadence. Gluttony. Cholesterol. The Double Down sandwich of 2010 consisted of bacon, cheese, and sauce between two patties of fried chicken. According to U.S. Department of Agriculture standards, one Double Down would have contained more than half of your daily allowance of sodium. But the customers lining up around the block for chicken sandwiches at Popeye’s and Chick-fil-A probably wouldn’t mind too much.

McDonald’s Onion Nuggets

nuggets
LauriPatterson/istockphoto

The exact taste of McDonald’s legendary deep-fried Onion Nuggets is lost to history. Well, not quite: It’s reported that an archivist has preserved a sample of this cheap menu item from the 1970s in a climate-controlled room in Elk Grove, Illinois.

Sonic Pickle-Os

Jamie G./Yelp

In 2003 Sonic decided to rerelease Pickle-O’s pickles, originally introduced in 1968. Sonic hoped the side dish would “delight billions of taste buds and millions of customers,” but the chain was still a decade early. In the years since, fried pickles have become a staple nationwide, especially as bar food.

Jack in the Box Frings

Fries and onion rings
GoodLifeStudio / istockphoto

Ideal for the indecisive junk food eater, Frings were a simple dish of french fries and onion rings in the same package. Frings, introduced in 1979, have “gone the way of mood rings and shag carpeting,” according to the Jack in the Box website — which is a little odd, since the Jack in the Box menu still includes french fries and onion rings that can be bought separately and combined.

Burger King Rodeo Burger

Burger King’s Rodeo Burger by Willis Lam ((CC BY-SA))

The often-overlooked Rodeo Burger was found on Burger King’s value menu, where it held its own against such staples as chicken nuggets and cheesy tots. It featured onion rings and barbecue sauce in place of cheese, and Serious Eats said it was an “unexpected jewel in Burger King’s crown” — especially for just $1 . Don’t confuse the Rodeo Burger with its big sibling, the Rodeo King, which was a half-pound, 1,250-calorie monstrosity that threw bacon and mayo into the mix.

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