Here's what it's like to eat at McDonald's in a city that bans beef
Erin Fuchs/Business Insider
I'm not a huge fan of McDonald's. A nearly lifelong vegetarian, I try to eat healthful food whenever I can. Even when I was a little kid and still ate meat, I rarely got to visit the Golden Arches and enjoy a Happy Meal.
While my colleagues and friends sometimes "treat" themselves to an Egg McMuffin breakfast or a Big Mac after a long day at work, I can honestly say I never have any desire to go there.
There is one exception. As a junior in college, I spent a year studying in Vienna and discovered I actually enjoyed the Austrian McDonald's. I went there all the time, drawn in by the allure of food that was both comforting and familiar and an intriguing variation of the kind of McDonald's available back home.
I could get plain vanilla soft serve and Gemüse (German for vegetable) nuggets, which were an Austrian version of chicken nuggets — only they were vegetarian. During that one year in my life, I became a loyal McDonald's patron.
In the decade that followed, I would go to McDonald's only once, to get my McDonald's-loving roommate a Big Mac and some fries after his dog died. Recently, though, I went back to Mickey D's again — again, in a foreign country. Intrigued by the notion of a US fast-food chain that might have some slight variations, I stopped by a Mumbai McDonald's while on my honeymoon in India.
I was particularly drawn to the McDonald's because I knew that, last year, the state that includes Mumbai became the latest in the country to ban the sale of beef. The city's McDonald's was sure to be non-traditional.
The McDonald's was off a hectic shopping area for pedestrians.
Erin Fuchs/Business InsiderRonald McDonald beckons us inside. He looks the same in India.
Erin Fuchs/Business InsiderRight away, I'm presented with Mumbai's answer to the Big Mac: the Maharaja Mac, which it calls "The Social Burger."
Erin Fuchs/Business InsiderSee the rest of the story at Business Insider