"Where's the Beef" Stew. The phrase first came to public attention as a U. The phrase originated as a slogan for the fast food chain Wendy's. Since then it has become an all-purpose phrase questioning the substance of an idea, event or product.
In the words of Clara Peller (RIP). The term "Where's the Beef?" came to be an all-purpose phrase questioning the substance of an idea, event or product. Where is the substance or the important part (of something)? You can have "Where's the Beef" Stew using 9 ingredients and 3 steps. Here is how you achieve it.
Ingredients of "Where's the Beef" Stew
- You need 3 of tomatoes, skinned.
- It's 1 can of peas.
- It's 1 can of corn.
- Prepare 1 can of vegetable medley.
- It's 6 of potatoes, skinned and halved.
- Prepare 1 cup of oil.
- You need 1 of Beef Pot Roast.
- You need 2 of onions, cut into 1/4 wedges.
- Prepare 2 of whole celery stalks, chopped.
You need evidence to back up your claims. The program looks good on paper, but how do we know it will really work? where's the beef?unknown. A popular phrase that the Wendy's hamburger chain had actress Claire Pellar say in a TV ad when she and two other elderly ladies were checking out a competitor's hamburger that had a "big fluffy bun". Peller even recorded a "Where's the Beef?" novelty single with Nashville disc jockey Coyote McCloud.
"Where's the Beef" Stew instructions
- fill a large pot with water, add frozen pot roast.
- turn on medium heat and add all ingredients, season with salt, pepper, garlic salt.
- stir, cover, cook on medium heat for 3 hrs, serve garnished with leftover celery leaf ( I don't add beef bullion but you can).
The "Where's the beef?" commercial was written by Cliff Freeman and directed by Joe Sedelmaier for the old Dancer Fitzgerald Sample agency. Peller a year after its debut, in the wake of her appearance in a spot for Prego Plus pasta sauce in which she declared: "I found it! A pair of adventurers tired of nibbling on stale tack and moldy cheese have followed their empty bellies to remote wisent grazing grounds, intent on bagging a stray bovine or three to roast over the night's bonfire. This post was prompted by some back and forth with one of our commenters. I recently posted about the ineffectiveness of the massive investment scientology made into TV advertising.