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Mighty Taco Edits Draft[edit]

Words outside of parenthesis are from the original article and respective sources (words within parenthesis indicate proposed edits)

(picture of the inside of a Mighty Taco location, presumably on Walden avenue, to be taken by myself soon)

Mighty Taco[edit]

Mighty Taco is a Mexican-style fast-food restaurant chain in the Buffalo, New York, United States, area. Mighty Taco restaurants are owned and operated by Mighty Taco Inc., a privately owned corporation.

The first Mighty Taco opened at 1247 Hertel Avenue in Buffalo, NY on August 31, 1973. There were four owners: Dan Scepkowski, Andy Gerovac, Ken Koczur and Bruce Robertson. Dan Scepkowski is the current owner of the company, having bought out the other founders. (As of July 2016, Mighty Taco has 25 locations throughout the Western New York region.)[2]

Mighty Taco opened its first restaurant in the Rochester, NY area in April 2012, the second location outside the Buffalo market, the first one outside the Buffalo market since the closure of the Fredonia, NY location in 2003. On June 16, 2014 the second Rochester area location opened in Greece.On January 25, 2016 the first Mighty Taco in the Syracuse area opened up in Cicero.

On August 31, 2013, Mighty Taco marked its 40th anniversary.

A Mighty Taco location in West Seneca

Contents[edit]

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Fare[edit]

The Super Mighty, El Niño Burrito, Roastitios and Buffitos are signature products of Mighty Taco. Other menu items include tacosburritosfajitas and nachos, as well as vegetarian and meatless options.

One of its first specialty burritos, the "El Niño Burrito, features a half-pound of ground beef.[3] In 2008, Mighty Taco began serving the "Buffito" made with Buffalo-style chicken and blue cheese or ranch dressing. In 2009, the "Mighty Fish Taco" was introduced, consisting of a battered fish filet, lettuce, tomato, cheese, tartar sauce or salsa. The "Carne-Alota" became available in 2012, featuring BBQ pork, Buffito chicken, fajita chicken, seasoned ground beef and fajita steak in an extra-large tortilla. 2013 saw the addition of the "Max Buffito" which includes a new extra-large jalapeño-cheddar tortilla. An enhanced menu was introduced in the summer of 2013, allowing more options, extras and combinations of basic ingredients including the tortilla—white, wheat or corn; and the meat—seasoned ground beef or seasoned ground chicken. In the later half of 2016, Mighty Taco began serving the "Mighty Q", a pressed burrito in the style of a quesadilla, containing a choice of plain, chicken, or beef along with customization toppings, which could be made in standard form or as a smaller "dipper".

Chow Down ordering service[edit]

On October 25, 2010, Mighty Taco began offering an online ordering service called "Chow Down", shipping Mighty Taco Beef and Cheese, or Bean and Cheese Burritos, to anywhere in the United States.[4] As of 2016, the options consist of one dozen Beef and Cheese Burritos for $49.90, or two dozen for $88.60, one dozen Bean and Cheese burritos for $44.85, or two dozen for $77.30, two dozen of a combination of the burritos for $85.65, and four 12 oz. bottles of signature hot sauce for $13.00. These prices do not include shipping and handling and may change with seasonal sales.

Illness[edit]

In October 2016, more than 100 people got sick from eating re-fried beans at Mighty Taco locations in Erie County and Niagara County. Mighty Taco removed that batch of beans. Customers who had eaten at a Mighty Taco location at this time reported symptoms of nausea and vomiting after their meal. It is currently unknown what caused the beans to spoil, but no new cases of illness from Mighty Taco have been reported since October 6th.

Advertising[edit]

Mighty Taco is known for having unusual, somewhat surreal TV advertisements, created by Paragon Advertising (which went out of business in 2015). Several of these commercials are also designed to be permissible on commercial-free public television stations, and WNED-TV airs the advertisements when promoting Mighty Taco as a supporter. Their radio advertisements are usually parodies of popular culture, such as prescription drug commercials, with a non sequitur at the end of the commercial directing listeners to Mighty Taco.

References[edit]

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  8. Jump up^ Putin banned from 'Mighty Taco' restaurantAssociated Press (April 4, 2014). Retrieved April 4, 2014.

References[edit]

1. ^Associated Press. Number of illnesses from Mighty Taco's bad beans tops 160. auburnpub.com. Retrieved October 12, 2016

2.^Menu!. Mighty Taco. Retrieved October, 2016