This California Restaurant Lasted Just Six Months Before a Health Scare Shut It Down

Restaurant closures have continued to reshape local dining corridors across California, where operators are contending with soft traffic, high costs, and intense public scrutiny when food-safety concerns surface. In San Francisco, Hamburger Project’s Mission District location at 598 Guerrero Street closed on April 19, 2026, after about six months in business and only weeks after a viral image of raw ground beef left outside the restaurant drew backlash.

The closure came after a viral sidewalk delivery photo

Hamburger Project permanently closed its Mission District restaurant at 598 Guerrero Street on April 19, 2026, according to Eater San Francisco, which cited co-owner Tan Truong. The location had opened in October 2025 as a second outpost for the brand, giving the smashburger concept a presence beyond its original Divisadero Street restaurant. That means the Mission location lasted roughly six months before shutting down.

The closure followed a widely shared March social-media post showing four packages of raw ground beef and a large container of mayonnaise sitting on the sidewalk outside the business during unusually warm weather, according to Eater San Francisco and follow-up local coverage from SFist. The image circulated on Reddit and raised questions about whether the food might later be used in service. A Reddit user said the products appeared to remain outside for about an hour, though that timing was not independently confirmed in the reporting.

Truong told Eater San Francisco that the restaurant discarded the delivery immediately and had internal procedures that prohibited staff from using food handled under those conditions. He also said the delivery driver left the items outside because no employees were available to receive them at the time. The company said it updated delivery procedures after the incident.

What the shutdown means in San Francisco

The confirmed closure affects one specific California location: Hamburger Project’s Mission District restaurant in San Francisco. Reporting from Eater San Francisco, Patch, and the San Francisco Standard all identified the closed site as the Guerrero Street outpost near 18th Street. The company has not released any broader California closure list, and there is no public indication in the available reporting that additional Hamburger Project locations in the state were shut down at the same time.

The brand’s original restaurant at 808 Divisadero Street remains open, according to the company’s website and local coverage published after the Mission closure. That distinction matters for customers because the business itself did not cease operations statewide; only the Mission District location was confirmed closed. For San Francisco diners, the change is therefore limited to one neighborhood storefront rather than a full brand exit from the market.

The Guerrero Street address has also seen repeated restaurant turnover. Before Hamburger Project, the site housed Handroll Project, another concept from the same ownership group, and earlier tenants included other well-known San Francisco restaurants, according to local reports. The Mission closure adds another short run to a corner that has struggled to maintain a lasting food business.

Weak traction, not a recall, was the stated reason

No FDA recall, state recall notice, or health department closure order was identified in the available source material tied to this incident. The reported issue was a single unattended delivery that triggered a public backlash, not a published product recall with a recall number, lot code list, or multistate distribution notice. The available reporting also does not identify any confirmed illnesses connected to the March incident.

Instead, Truong told Eater San Francisco that the underlying reason for the closure was lack of business at the Mission location. His statement was direct: the restaurant was not getting the traction needed there. That explanation places the shutdown in a broader restaurant industry context, where operators often face a difficult mix of high occupancy costs, neighborhood-specific demand challenges, and thin margins even before a reputational issue emerges.

For customers, the practical takeaway is narrow and specific. The Mission District Hamburger Project is closed, while the Divisadero Street location continues to operate based on the latest published reports. The company has publicly tied the closure to poor sales at that address, and the available coverage does not show a wider shutdown of the brand in California.

Waffle House Regulars Are Losing Patience: Here’s What Changed

Breakfast chains across the U.S. spent much of 2025 adjusting prices as avian flu disrupted egg supplies and pushed food costs higher. At Waffle House, that pressure landed in a highly visible way when the company added a temporary 50-cent surcharge per egg, a move that gave regular customers a clear marker for how much the economics of a cheap breakfast had changed.

Waffle House put a number on rising costs

Waffle House confirmed on February 4, 2025, that it had added a temporary surcharge of 50 cents for every egg ordered, tying the increase to the national egg shortage and higher prices linked to bird flu. Reuters, ABC News and other outlets reported that the fee applied across the chain’s restaurants, making it one of the clearest menu-price signals customers would see at the table. The company also said it would continue monitoring egg markets and adjust the surcharge as conditions changed.

The scale was significant because Waffle House operates more than 2,000 restaurants across 25 states, according to the company’s own corporate history page. That meant even a modest per-egg charge was likely to be noticed quickly by the chain’s core customers, many of whom order traditional breakfast plates built around two or three eggs. For a chain long associated with low-cost, always-open dining, the surcharge stood out more than a standard menu increase might have.

The company later removed the surcharge after egg prices eased. Georgia Public Broadcasting and other outlets reported in early July 2025 that Waffle House had dropped the fee after nearly five months, saying improved supply conditions and fewer new bird flu cases had helped stabilize the market. Even after the surcharge ended, it had already become part of a wider debate about whether the brand’s value proposition had shifted.

What customers noticed — and what is not officially tracked

What is confirmed is the pricing change itself and the timing around it. What is not officially tracked by Waffle House in public reporting is a national count of customer complaints tied to the surcharge, dining-room cleanliness, or service experience by state or city. The company has not released a public breakdown showing whether any specific markets saw more complaints or traffic pressure after the fee was introduced.

Still, anecdotal criticism became easier to find online as the surcharge drew attention back to the overall in-store experience. In the reference material provided for this story, a NewsBreak article summarized Reddit posts from diners describing sticky tables, flies, loud staff and meals they said did not justify the cost. Those accounts are not the same as audited customer data, but they help explain why the surcharge resonated beyond the extra cents on a receipt.

That distinction matters because Waffle House’s brand has long depended on customers accepting a stripped-down environment in exchange for speed, familiarity and price. When the price side changes, even temporarily, more diners appear willing to re-evaluate the rest of the experience. The company has not released a comprehensive list of affected cities, stores or customer feedback patterns tied to the fee, so the local impact remains partly visible only through scattered public reactions rather than official location-by-location data.

Why a small fee carried outsized meaning for regulars

The underlying cause was broader than one chain. Reuters and other reports tied Waffle House’s surcharge directly to the avian flu outbreak that forced the culling of millions of egg-laying hens and pushed egg prices to record highs in early 2025. In that context, the fee was a supply-cost response, not a standalone brand decision disconnected from the market.

But the customer reaction reflected a second issue: value sensitivity. Waffle House’s identity is built around affordable breakfast staples, and a per-egg surcharge called attention to the cost of an item that customers tend to think of as basic, not premium. That made the increase more visible than a quieter menu rewrite would have been, especially for repeat customers who know their usual order totals.

For customers, the practical takeaway is straightforward. The temporary egg surcharge that began on February 4, 2025, was later removed in July 2025 as market conditions improved, so diners should not expect that specific fee to remain in place. What the episode did show is that even at a chain built on consistency, food inflation can quickly change the math of a routine meal, and customers may judge the full restaurant experience more critically when the bill rises.

Maine’s Weirdest Restaurants Are Still Standing: Here’s Where to Find Them

Across the U.S., diners continue seeking restaurant experiences that offer more than a standard dining room and menu. In Maine, that demand still points to a small group of unusual restaurants that remain in operation in Portland, Biddeford, Freedom, South Thomaston, Brunswick, and Scarborough.

Five unusual Maine restaurants are still operating in 2026

Five restaurants identified in recent NewsBreak reporting remain open in Maine as of July 11, 2026: DiMillo’s On the Water in Portland, Palace Diner in Biddeford, The Lost Kitchen in Freedom, The Holy Donut with four Maine locations, and McLoons Lobster Shack on Spruce Head Island. The restaurants differ widely in format, but each is tied to a physical setup or reservation model that is uncommon even in a state known for destination dining.

DiMillo’s continues to operate at 25 Long Wharf in Portland, according to the restaurant’s website. The business describes itself as a waterfront restaurant and lounge and maintains regular dining hours, with its long-running identity tied to a permanently docked vessel rather than a land-based storefront.

Palace Diner also remains in service at 18 Franklin Street in Biddeford. On its history page, the diner states that the structure was built in Lowell, Massachusetts, in 1927 by the Pollard Company, has spent its full life in Biddeford, and is one of two Pollard cars remaining in America.

The Lost Kitchen has also confirmed that its reservation system remains postcard-based for the 2026 season. Its current dinner FAQ says postcards are randomly selected, chosen guests are called in April, dinners are held on Saturdays from May through October, and the 2026 price is $295 per person before tax, gratuity, and beverages.

Where they are located, and what is confirmed about each one

The five restaurants are spread across several parts of Maine rather than concentrated in one tourism corridor. Portland is home to DiMillo’s and two Holy Donut shops, while The Holy Donut also lists locations in Brunswick and Scarborough. Biddeford has Palace Diner, Freedom has The Lost Kitchen, and South Thomaston is home to McLoons Lobster Shack on Spruce Head Island.

Some of the unusual features are confirmed directly by the operators. DiMillo’s history materials tie the restaurant’s public identity to the Portland waterfront and its floating setting, while Palace Diner confirms the car’s 1927 construction date and rare surviving status. McLoons says it operates across from the area’s oldest working lobster wharf and markets the chance to watch lobstermen unload the day’s catch.

For The Holy Donut, the unusual element is ingredient-based rather than architectural. The company describes itself as a maker of Maine potato donuts and currently lists four operating Maine locations: Brunswick, Portland on Commercial Street, Portland on Park Avenue, and Scarborough.

Not every detail in broader coverage is independently confirmed on current official pages. For example, The Lost Kitchen confirms its postcard process, season, address, and pricing, but it does not publish a live public seat count on its current FAQ. Where outside reports describe annual postcard volume or total seats, those figures are not fully detailed on the restaurant’s present reservation page.

Why these restaurants keep drawing attention in Maine

What links these restaurants is not a shared menu category but a business model built around scarcity, setting, or preservation. The Lost Kitchen explicitly says it stayed offline because internet booking was not going to solve its reservation problems and because the restaurant is intentionally small. That explains why the postcard system remains central to its identity in 2026.

Palace Diner’s appeal is rooted in preservation rather than novelty branding. Its operators say the 2021 renovation was intended to give the building strength and vitality for years to come, underscoring that the diner’s draw is inseparable from the survival of a nearly century-old structure still serving daily meals in downtown Biddeford.

At DiMillo’s and McLoons, location does much of the work. One places diners aboard a floating restaurant on Portland’s Long Wharf, while the other places them beside a working lobster harbor in South Thomaston. Those are settings that cannot be easily replicated by chains or new-build concepts.

For customers, the practical takeaway is straightforward: these restaurants are still findable, still operating, and still defined by the same unusual features that made them destinations in the first place. In 2026, Maine’s oddest restaurant experiences remain less about gimmicks than about places that have kept distinctive formats in regular service.

This Sold-Out Grocery Favorite Just Got Recalled: Here’s What Went Wrong

Frozen convenience foods have become one of grocery’s fastest-moving categories, especially as shoppers snap up globally inspired meals with limited shelf time. That trend now includes a recall at ALDI, where a sold-out favorite has been pulled over an undeclared allergen issue.

ALDI recalls a popular Fusia kimbap item over undeclared tuna

Gellert Global Group announced on July 2, 2026 that it was recalling 8.1-ounce packages of ALDI Brand Fusia Asian Inspirations Kimchi & Tofu Kimbap after the product was found to potentially contain undeclared tuna, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The FDA listed the recall under food and beverage allergens and said the item was sold in a sealed, microwave-safe plastic wrapper marked with a Best If Used By date of OCT.08.2027. The company said no illnesses had been reported as of the announcement date.

The specific product named in the recall is ALDI Brand Fusia Asian Inspirations Kimchi & Tofu Kimbap, net weight 8.1 ounces. The FDA notice publicly lists the reason as undeclared fish, specifically tuna, which is one of the major food allergens that must be declared on packaging. The company said the recall began after a consumer found that a fish-containing product had been distributed in packaging that did not disclose the presence of fish.

The official FDA recall posting identifies the company as Gellert Global Group of Elizabeth, New Jersey. The agency’s public recall page shows the event as active or completed but not marked terminated as of the most recent FDA listing available through July 7, 2026. An FDA enforcement recall number and a hazard classification such as Class I, Class II, or Class III were not listed in the public recall materials reviewed for this article.

The recall reaches 20 jurisdictions, but store-level lists have not been released

The recalled kimbap was distributed to select ALDI retail stores in Connecticut, Washington, D.C., Delaware, Louisiana, Maryland, Maine, Massachusetts, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Vermont, and West Virginia, according to the FDA notice. That means the recall spans the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, South, and parts of the Midwest, with no public indication that stores outside those jurisdictions received the affected product.

What remains unconfirmed is which individual stores within those states and the District were sent the item. ALDI has not released a comprehensive store-by-store list of affected locations in the public materials reviewed, and the FDA notice identifies only “select ALDI retail stores.” That leaves customers to identify the product by name, size, packaging format, and Best If Used By date rather than by a published local store roster.

The notice also does not provide a UPC code or lot code in the public recall posting reviewed for this article. Instead, the identifying details center on the 8.1-ounce package, the Fusia Asian Inspirations branding, and the OCT.08.2027 date mark. Consumers who bought that specific item were told to return it to the place of purchase for a full refund, and the company also provided a customer contact line for questions.

A packaging breakdown caused the problem, and shoppers should expect refunds

The company said a temporary breakdown in production and packaging procedures caused the recall and that the issue has since been corrected. That explanation, published in the FDA-posted company announcement, points to a labeling and packaging failure rather than a contamination event. In practical terms, the problem was that tuna ended up in product packaging marketed as kimchi and tofu without fish being declared on the label.

That distinction matters for shoppers with fish allergies or severe sensitivities. The FDA notice said people with an allergy or severe sensitivity to fish could face a serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume the product. As of July 2, 2026, however, the company said no adverse reactions or illnesses had been reported in connection with this recall.

For customers, the immediate guidance is narrow and specific: return the recalled 8.1-ounce ALDI Brand Fusia Asian Inspirations Kimchi & Tofu Kimbap to the place of purchase for a full refund. Gellert Global Group said consumers with questions can contact the company during weekday business hours, while ALDI’s separate public notice has also advised shoppers not to consume the affected item. The recall remains one more example of how a single packaging error can quickly affect a high-demand grocery item across multiple states.

Two Nebraska Restaurant Icons Are Closing Their Doors This Month

Restaurant closures have continued to reshape dining districts across the country as operators confront lease decisions, uneven traffic and higher operating costs. In Nebraska, that pressure is now hitting two familiar names tied to Omaha and Lincoln, with one confirmed closure in Aksarben Village and one Lincoln closure report that remains unresolved.

Oklahoma Joe’s in Omaha is set to close its last Nebraska restaurant

Oklahoma Joe’s BBQ is expected to close its restaurant at 1912 South 67th Street in Omaha’s Aksarben Village when its lease expires in July, according to reporting published by NewsBreak and attributed to local business details about the property and operator. The restaurant chose not to renew the lease, and the building owner, Noddle Companies, has already begun looking for another restaurant tenant for the space.

The Omaha location opened in November 2018 in one of the city’s busiest mixed-use dining and entertainment districts. Its closure is significant because it is the last Oklahoma Joe’s location in Nebraska after the chain’s west Omaha restaurant at 1405 South 204th Street in Elkhorn closed permanently on December 31, 2024, according to the same report. That leaves the Aksarben restaurant as the final Nebraska outpost until the lease expiration takes effect.

The restaurant name has also caused confusion for some diners. This Omaha operation is not affiliated with Joe’s Kansas City Bar-B-Que, the Kansas City restaurant group that used the Oklahoma Joe’s name before rebranding in 2014. The Nebraska restaurant is tied instead to Tulsa-based pitmaster Joe Davidson’s Oklahoma Joe’s brand, a separate operation described in the NewsBreak report.

Lincoln’s reported China Garden closure remains unclear

In Lincoln, reports surfaced in early July that a China Garden location had closed, but the exact location and status have not been fully confirmed. NewsBreak reported the closure as part of a broader roundup of Nebraska restaurant changes, while also noting that Lincoln has more than one restaurant operating under the China Garden name.

That uncertainty matters because the best-known China Garden at 2901 S. 84th Street in Lincoln appeared to remain open with current business hours at the time of the report. No official closure notice, company statement or comprehensive public list identifying a specific closed Lincoln address was cited in the source material provided for this story. As a result, it is confirmed only that a closure report exists, not that all China Garden restaurants in Lincoln have shut down.

The lack of a verified location list limits what can be said about citywide impact. No statewide location count for China Garden was provided in the source material, and no public filing or landlord announcement was identified there to clarify whether the reported closure involved a permanent shutdown, relocation or temporary interruption.

Lease decisions and local restaurant churn are driving the immediate picture

For Oklahoma Joe’s in Omaha, the clearest stated reason is the lease decision. The restaurant did not renew its lease at Aksarben Village, according to the NewsBreak report, and Noddle Companies is already marketing or seeking a replacement restaurant for the site. No separate public statement in the provided materials gave a more detailed explanation tied to labor, food costs or sales.

The broader context is that restaurant turnover has remained a regular feature in Nebraska markets, even when the state has not seen the same volume of closures reported elsewhere. A prior Lincoln Journal Star business feature noted that Lincoln recorded a net loss of restaurants in one recent year, with 29 openings and 31 closings, underscoring the narrow margins many operators face. That city data does not explain either July closure by itself, but it does show the broader climate in which restaurants are making renewal and operating decisions.

For customers, the immediate takeaway is practical. Omaha diners should expect the Aksarben Oklahoma Joe’s to leave the market this month when its lease ends, removing the chain’s final Nebraska location. Lincoln diners interested in China Garden should expect continued uncertainty until a specific address or operator statement confirms which location, if any, has permanently closed.

5 Grocery Items Where the Name Brand Might Not Be Worth It

You do not always need the familiar logo to get a good grocery product. In many aisles, the real difference is less about quality and more about packaging, marketing, and habit.

Private label has evolved well beyond the bargain-bin stereotype. NielsenIQ reported in 2025 that U.S. private label sales were still growing year over year, showing how comfortable shoppers have become with store-brand basics.

Breakfast cereal and basic oats

Breakfast cereal is one of the clearest examples of a category where branding can outweigh substance. For plain toasted oats, corn flakes, rice squares, and shredded wheat, ingredient panels are often remarkably similar, even when the shelf price is not. That matters because cereal is one of the easiest products to compare side by side: whole grain, sugar, sodium, and serving size are all plainly listed.

Consumer Reports has repeatedly found that store brands can hold their own in blind taste tests, and the organization has also noted that store-brand groceries often cost at least 20% to 25% less than comparable name brands. In a high-volume category like cereal, that gap adds up fast over a month. For families buying multiple boxes a week, the premium for a mascot and a national ad campaign can be hard to justify.

The exception is highly specific texture-driven cereals, where some shoppers do notice differences in crunch or sweetness. But for oatmeal, toasted oat rings, bran flakes, and basic granola, the better play is usually to compare nutrition labels and unit prices instead of assuming the biggest brand is best. If the ingredient list and nutrition panel are close, the cheaper box usually wins.

Canned tomatoes and frozen vegetables

Canned tomatoes are another smart place to challenge brand loyalty. USDA maintains grade standards for canned tomato products, and basic versions across brands often rely on the same simple building blocks: tomatoes, salt, citric acid, and sometimes calcium chloride to help diced tomatoes keep their shape. In practice, that means many everyday uses such as soup, chili, pasta sauce, and braises do not require the most expensive national label.

Where the name brand may matter more is in specialty styles, especially premium whole peeled tomatoes or varieties prized for sweetness and low seed count. But for crushed tomatoes, sauce, puree, and standard diced cans going into cooked dishes, store brands are often perfectly adequate. The cooking process itself tends to narrow any subtle flavor gap.

Frozen vegetables follow a similar logic. Consumer Reports has praised some store-brand frozen vegetables for delivering quality comparable to national competitors at lower prices. Since these products are typically processed quickly after harvest, the deciding factors are usually cut size, sauce or seasoning, and whether the bag contains unnecessary extras, not whether the logo is famous.

Yogurt, spices, and pantry seasonings

Yogurt can also be a value trap when shoppers buy reputation instead of reading the label. The FDA’s yogurt standard allows a wide range of safe, suitable ingredients, including sweeteners and stabilizers, so a premium-looking cup is not automatically simpler or better. For plain Greek yogurt, vanilla yogurt, and large tubs used for breakfasts, dips, or baking, store brands can be excellent if protein, sugar, and ingredient lists line up well.

The same principle applies to many dried spices, though with one important twist: cheaper is not the only consideration. Consumer Reports found concerning levels of heavy metals in some herbs and spices across multiple brands, while the FDA has also posted recalls and public health alerts involving ground cinnamon with elevated lead levels in recent years. In other words, a famous brand name is not a guarantee of superiority, but shoppers should still read recall news and buy from retailers with strong quality control.

For garlic powder, oregano, paprika, and cinnamon used in ordinary home cooking, the best strategy is not blind loyalty to either national or store labels. Compare freshness dates, inspect packaging, and buy quantities you will actually finish. In these categories, value comes from smart label reading and turnover, not from paying extra just because a brand is more recognizable.

Experts Say You’ve Probably Been Using Your Freezer Wrong This Whole Time

Most people think of the freezer as a simple stop button for food. In reality, it only works well when temperature, packaging, and timing all line up.

That is why experts say many home cooks are not just underusing the freezer, but using it in ways that quietly damage food quality and sometimes food safety.

Your freezer is not a magic time capsule

A surprising number of people treat the freezer like indefinite storage with no downside. USDA and FDA guidance makes an important distinction: food kept at 0°F stays safe for much longer, but quality still declines over time. That means flavor, texture, and moisture can deteriorate even when the food is technically still safe to eat.

This is especially true with leftovers, which USDA says should be frozen within 3 to 4 days and are best used within 3 to 4 months for quality. If you wait too long to freeze them, you are locking in decline rather than preserving freshness. Freezing works best when food goes in at its peak, not after it has already spent too long in the refrigerator.

Experts also stress that appliance settings matter more than many households realize. USDA and FDA both recommend keeping the freezer at 0°F or below, and they note that frequent door opening or weak freezer compartments are not ideal for long-term storage. In other words, a crowded, warm, frost-heavy freezer may be preserving less than you think.

Packaging mistakes are ruining your food

If your frozen meat comes out leathery, discolored, or covered in ice crystals, the problem is often not the freezer itself. It is the packaging. USDA says the porous store wrap used for meat and poultry is often not enough for long-term freezing, and recommends overwrapping with freezer-safe materials to prevent air exposure and freezer burn.

That advice extends beyond meat. The National Center for Home Food Preservation says proper containers protect flavor, color, moisture, and nutritive value, and notes that rigid containers and freezer bags are both useful when matched to the food. Air is the enemy, so bulky containers half-filled with soup or loosely tied bags are a recipe for deterioration.

Vegetables present another common mistake. Many people wash, chop, and freeze them raw, assuming the freezer will do the rest. But the National Center for Home Food Preservation says blanching is essential for almost all vegetables before freezing because it slows the enzyme activity that keeps degrading produce even in frozen storage. Skip that step, and your vegetables may return from the freezer limp, dull, and disappointing.

Thawing and organizing matter more than you think

One of the biggest freezer errors happens after the food comes out. FDA says food should be thawed safely in the refrigerator, under cold water, or in the microwave, not on the counter. And if food is thawed in cold water or the microwave, it should be cooked immediately, because room-temperature shortcuts create the conditions bacteria need.

Organization matters, too. A freezer stuffed with mystery containers and unlabeled bags encourages waste. Experts recommend dating items, freezing in usable portions, and rotating older items to the front. That simple system turns the freezer from a graveyard of forgotten food into a tool for meal planning, budget control, and safer storage.

The smartest approach is to think of freezing as a technique, not a dumping ground. Freeze foods quickly, package them tightly, label them clearly, and use them within their best-quality window. Done right, your freezer can preserve far more than convenience. It can protect taste, cut waste, and make the food you already bought work harder for you.

Your Grocery Store Knows More About You Than You Think

A grocery store looks ordinary on the surface. Behind the scenes, it can function like a data company with carts, scanners, and produce bins.

Every swipe, tap, and click helps build a picture of who you are, what you buy, and what you may buy next.

The loyalty card is really a data engine

Most shoppers think of loyalty programs as a simple trade: hand over a phone number, get a lower price. In reality, that discount is also a consent mechanism that ties purchases to an identifiable household over time. Consumer Reports reported in May 2025 that Kroger was collecting extensive loyalty-program data and making inferences such as an “income predictor,” showing how grocery records can become far more revealing than a list of favorite brands.

That matters because grocery data is unusually intimate. It can suggest whether a household has a baby, a pet, dietary restrictions, a medical condition, or a change in financial stress. Purchase patterns around gluten-free foods, pregnancy tests, low-sodium items, or bulk instant noodles may not tell the whole story, but they can help retailers and their partners make strong assumptions about a shopper’s life.

The business case is powerful. NielsenIQ has described loyalty data as an asset that retailers can monetize with supplier partners through personalized offers and campaign measurement. McKinsey has likewise noted that grocers increasingly treat loyalty data, digital engagement, and in-store attention as core inputs for retail media and targeted promotions. In other words, the supermarket is not just selling groceries; it is selling audience insight.

Your data can shape the deals you see

Once a grocer can identify and segment shoppers, it can personalize promotions with remarkable precision. That may mean digital coupons for the cereal you buy every two weeks, a meat discount when your purchase cycle suggests you are due, or app notifications timed to your usual shopping day. McKinsey has said promotions informed by analytics and personalization can lift sales, giving retailers a direct incentive to refine these systems constantly.

Regulators are paying closer attention to where that logic could lead. In July 2024, the Federal Trade Commission issued orders to companies involved in what it calls surveillance pricing, seeking information about technologies that use personal data such as location, demographics, browsing history, and shopping history to influence targeted prices. The FTC has explicitly said grocery stores may be among the retailers using these systems.

That does not mean every supermarket is secretly charging each customer a completely different price on every banana. It does mean the line between a personalized coupon and a personalized price environment is getting thinner. If one shopper reliably sees better app offers, richer rewards, or more relevant discounts than another, data is already shaping who gets the best path through the store.

Why this matters for shoppers now

For consumers, the biggest issue is not only privacy but power. A grocer that knows your routines can influence your choices without making the mechanism obvious. The app highlights one deal, the shelf tag reinforces another, and the retailer’s ad network helps suppliers pay to appear in your digital path. What feels like convenience can also be a carefully engineered nudge.

This shift is happening as grocery chains search for profits beyond the checkout lane. McKinsey’s 2025 North America grocery outlook said retail media is becoming part of the industry’s profit architecture, built on shopper traffic, loyalty data, and digital engagement. That helps explain why stores want you in the app, in the rewards program, and in the delivery ecosystem all at once.

Shoppers are not powerless, but they should be realistic. If you use a loyalty account, shop online, clip digital coupons, and keep location services on, your supermarket likely has a richer profile of you than you expect. The modern grocery business still sells milk and bread, but it also sells prediction, persuasion, and data-driven access to your attention.

A New FDA Rule Could Change How Fast You Learn About a Food Recall

FDA

Food recalls have long depended on how quickly regulators and companies can trace a product through farms, processors, distributors and stores. A federal FDA traceability rule, finalized in late 2022 and still the subject of compliance changes in 2026, is meant to make that process faster for a defined list of higher-risk foods.

FDA finalized the rule in 2022, and it targets a defined list of foods

The Food and Drug Administration finalized its “Requirements for Additional Traceability Records for Certain Foods” rule on November 21, 2022, according to the agency and the Government Accountability Office. The rule requires companies that manufacture, process, pack or hold foods on the FDA’s Food Traceability List to keep additional records on key points in the supply chain, including shipping, receiving, transformation and initial packing.

The FDA has said those records are intended to support faster identification and removal of potentially contaminated food from the market. Under agency guidance, firms subject to the rule must be able to provide requested records to FDA within 24 hours, or within another reasonable time agreed to by the agency. That 24-hour standard is a central reason the rule could change how quickly consumers learn about a recall tied to a contaminated product.

The Food Traceability List is narrower than the full grocery store inventory. FDA materials identify fresh leafy greens, fresh-cut leafy greens, fresh melons, fresh cucumbers, fresh herbs, peppers, sprouts, tomatoes, tropical tree fruits, shell eggs, nut butters, soft and semi-soft cheeses, certain seafood products, and refrigerated ready-to-eat deli salads among the covered foods. The rule also applies in some cases to foods containing listed ingredients when those ingredients remain in the same form.

What the rule means nationally, and what is still unclear for shoppers

The rule is national in scope, not tied to one state or one retail chain. That means shoppers in every state could eventually see more precise recall announcements for covered foods if a contamination event occurs and the required records allow investigators to isolate a specific traceability lot code instead of warning against an entire category such as all romaine from a broad region.

What is not yet known is exactly how individual retailers will communicate that information to shoppers. The FDA rule governs recordkeeping and traceability, but it does not mandate one uniform consumer alert system such as text messages, app notifications or email warnings. Some grocers already use loyalty accounts and digital receipts to notify customers about recalls, but those practices vary by company.

The company-by-company details also remain unconfirmed because the rule applies across the supply chain, from producers to distributors to retailers, rather than naming specific brands in the regulation itself. There is no official FDA list of stores that will notify consumers directly under the rule, and the agency has not said that every shopper will receive personalized alerts when a covered product is recalled.

Why the timeline changed, and what customers should expect next

The rule was originally set to carry a compliance date of January 20, 2026, and the FDA reiterated that date in earlier guidance. But the agency later announced that it intended to extend the compliance date by 30 months to July 20, 2028. FDA said the change reflected concerns about whether all affected parts of the supply chain would have enough time to comply fully.

In 2026, the FDA also said Congress directed the agency not to enforce the Food Traceability Rule before July 20, 2028, matching the proposed extension date. The agency has continued holding public meetings and releasing guidance as it works through implementation questions, including lot-level tracking challenges and possible exemptions for some products such as certain cottage cheese items.

For customers, the practical takeaway is that the system is intended to make future recalls faster and more targeted for foods on the traceability list, but the full benefits depend on implementation across the supply chain. Until that date arrives, recalls will continue to rely on existing reporting systems, while FDA and industry prepare for a more detailed digital paper trail behind some of the foods most often linked to outbreaks.

5 Texas Restaurants So Weird You Won’t Believe They’re Real

Themed dining remains a durable part of the U.S. restaurant business, especially as operators look for experiences that give customers something beyond a standard meal. In Texas, that model is especially visible at five restaurants that pair food with stagecraft, oversized props, performance, and attractions that are unusual even by state standards.

Five restaurants, five very different kinds of spectacle

The Magic Time Machine in Addison remains one of the clearest examples of a restaurant built around performance. The company states that the concept first opened in San Antonio in August 1973, and that its Addison location followed in 1979. Its servers appear in costume as pop-culture characters, and the dining rooms are split into themed areas including a carousel, a teepee, a lunchbox and an astronaut-style space module, according to the restaurant’s official history.

In Boerne, Darkside Brick Oven Pizza Co. has built its identity around 1970s and 1980s nostalgia. The restaurant’s official site says owners Michael and Denice Hawes designed the concept to take guests “back in time,” and Community Impact reported the dining room includes props and memorabilia tied to films such as “Star Wars,” “Back to the Future,” “E.T.,” “Jaws,” “Superman,” “Indiana Jones,” and “The Terminator.” The business lists its address as 25 Truss Drive in Boerne.

The Big Texan Steak Ranch in Amarillo remains the best-known entry on the list because the restaurant has turned a single oversized plate into a long-running public event. The company says founder R.J. Lee opened the steakhouse in March 1960, and its history timeline says the one-hour 72-ounce steak challenge began in November 1960. The challenge still includes the steak, shrimp cocktail, baked potato, salad and a roll, and the restaurant says contestants who finish within one hour receive a full refund.

Where the Texas locations make the experience part of the draw

Some of these restaurants are unusual because of their dining rooms, while others add a location-specific attraction that is harder to replicate elsewhere. In Canyon, Feldman’s Wrong Way Diner describes itself as a place for anyone who has “gone the wrong way” or “wandered off the beaten path,” and its official site says the restaurant was established in 2003 at 2100 N. 2nd Avenue. The business is known for a room filled with vintage objects and a train running overhead, a detail also echoed in customer descriptions posted on the restaurant’s site.

Galveston’s Rainforest Cafe goes further by attaching a ride to the dining experience. Rainforest Cafe’s official Galveston location page says the property at 5310 Seawall Blvd. includes the Rainforest River Adventure Ride, a family boat ride sold separately for $9.99 per person. The company also describes Galveston as the only Rainforest Cafe location with a ride, making it a local outlier even within a national themed chain.

That geography matters because these restaurants are not interchangeable. Addison offers a long-running dinner-theater format in North Texas, Boerne leans into movie memorabilia near the San Antonio market, Amarillo ties its identity to roadside travel culture, Canyon mixes diner food with curated clutter, and Galveston combines a tourist-corridor restaurant with a paid attraction. The operators have not presented these five businesses as a formal statewide group, but each is publicly positioned as more than a standard restaurant.

Why these concepts continue to stand out in Texas

The common thread is not a shared menu or ownership structure. It is the decision to compete on atmosphere, novelty and repeatable storytelling at a time when many restaurants are trying to create experiences that stand apart from delivery-focused or fast-casual competition. Darkside’s owners say the concept was shaped by childhood memories of late-20th-century movies, arcades and pop culture, while The Magic Time Machine says its founding vision centered on serving food in an “energized atmosphere” with entertaining servers.

At The Big Texan, that strategy predates modern experiential marketing by decades. The company’s official materials continue to frame the 72-ounce challenge as a central attraction, not a side promotion, and the restaurant still markets the challenge as an on-site event supervised by staff in Amarillo. Rainforest Cafe, meanwhile, ties its Galveston identity to thunder effects, animatronic animals and its river ride, showing how chain restaurants can still carve out a one-off local feature.

For customers, the practical takeaway is straightforward: these are real operating Texas restaurants, but they are built as destination experiences as much as places to eat. Hours, admission charges for add-on attractions, and challenge rules vary by location, and at least one stop on this list includes a separately ticketed ride. What is confirmed is that all five businesses continue to present their unusual formats as part of the main draw, not a seasonal promotion or limited-time event.