KFC's secret menu still on safe custody
Decades old KFC secret menu is still in safe custody.
Recently a rumour spread around that the menu's secret has come out leading to the removal of Colonel Harland Sandar's handwritten recipe of 11 herbs and spices from safekeeping in KFC's corporate offices for the first time in decades.
The temporary relocation is allowing KFC to revamp security around a yellowing sheet of paper that contains one of the country's most famous corporate secrets.
The brand's top executive admitted his nerves were aflutter despite the tight security he lined up for the operation. “I don't want to be the president who loses the recipe,” KFC President Roger Eaton said. “Imagine how terrifying that would be.”
So important is the 68-year-old concoction that coats the chain's original recipe chicken that only two company executives at any time have access to it. The company refuses to release their name or title, and it use multiple suppliers who produce and blend the ingredients but know only a part of the entire contents, says a press release.
Louisiville-based KFC, part of the fast-food company Yum Brands Inc hired off-duty police officers and private security guards to whisk the document away to an undisclosed location in an armoured car. The recipe will be slid into a briefcase and handcuffed to security expert Bo Dietl for the ride. “There's no way anybody could get this recipe,” said Dietl, a former New York City police detective.
Sanders developed the formula in 1940 at his tiny restaurant in southeastern Kentucky and used it to launch the KFC chain in the early 1950s. He died in 1980, but his likeness is still central to KFC's marketing.
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