You mean they contract out the donuts to a large local bakery and have them trucked in after they’ve gone stale? (Note: I only know of one Dunkies that actually makes their own donuts, hence the remark about there’s really only Dunkies left in Massachusetts.)
Has anyone in this thread mentioned Mr. Donut yet? It was also present in West Texas, and it and Dunkin’ Donuts are the two doughnut giants in Thailand. I mentioned I worked at a Dunkin’ Donuts in West Texas; it’s so similar to Mr. Donut that the two places often swapped ingredients if one ran short. The franchise owners were friends with each other, but even if they had been friends with the folks at Winchell’s, also present, they said they could not have borrowed from there, because it was a completely different kind of mix.
It’s not pretentious, the servers are polite, it’s open 24 hrs, the coffee is decent, the prices family friendly, it’s clean, conveniently located, the donuts are fresh. They also offer sandwiches etc, at a good price.
Perfect for before/after your kids hockey game/soccer game, break from a highway drive, grab a coffee on the way to wherever. It’s comfortable for everyone from teenagers to truck drivers, dirty construction workers or office girls.
Very, very Canadian. It’s no wonder they’ve embraced it so completely.
Exactly. Either that, or TH has led us like lemmings into their idea of Canadiana and the working/middle class Canadian lifestyle. A country of average Joes/Janes sipping coffee, passing gossip, living the average life of Canadian mediocrity…in an average coffee shop.
There’s a Dunkin Donuts in Spokane? Where is it located? It was my understanding there was a Dunkin in Spokane during the 70s but it closed long ago. There also used to be quite a few Winchell’s in town before that franchise disappeared. Since then, aside from a few Krispy Kremes, the doughnut market here is mostly dominated by independent doughnut shops and supermarket bakeries.
Of course it doesn’t really matter much to me because I don’t eat doughnuts.
I think it is worth taking note of Crispy Creme’s attempt to enter the southern Ontario market… They got crushed in the exact manner mentioned above… a few weeks of busy crowds then the place was like a ghost town…
IMO and many other I know, they failed because all they had were donuts… they didn’t have a better coffee product than Timmy Ho’s… FWIW I felt their doughnuts were much tastier than Tim’s, thrice the fat, but tastier…
so if they failed as doughnut shop with a better doughnut… that says a lot about what Canadians value… coffee over doughnuts…
as for myself I order cookies and milk any time I am at Timmy’s with friends… unless it is morning then it is a sesame seed bagel with herb and garlic creme cheese…
And Krispy Kreme has opened in Bangkok to much fanfare. In Siam Paragon shopping center on Tuesday. Story here.
Thousands of people lined up waiting to get in, the first ones arriving at 10pm the night before. I kid you not. There were prizes for the first 200 customers who bought a dozen. Nos 101-200 I think just got a free second dozen with the purchase of one. But the “big” prizes went to the first five or six people. The first customer got free doughnuts for a year, emaning one dozen a week free for a year; the second customer got free doughnuts for six months. Etc.
But Jesus! It’s not as if Thailand suffers from a tragic doughnut shortage. As already related above, there are LOTS of international doughnut chains dotted throughout Bangkok and the rest of the country. Once the shopping center opened, it was utter pandemonium in the vicinity of Krispy Kreme, according to someone I know who happened to be there for other reasons besides doughnuts.
I always enjoyed Tim Hortons, but I was always a trifle creeped out by their marketing.
After all - the chain was named for a hockey player, Tim Horton, who died in a terrible car crash. Isn’t it just a bit insensitive to name your best-selling product “Timbits”?
Another thing that Tim’s has done very well is that “location, location, location” thing - they’re masters at finding good places for their stores, whether the drive-through kind or the mall kind. When I’m driving somewhere and want a coffee for the trip, odds are I’ll find a Tims pretty easily. They’re also good at finding good mall locations - in the main downtown mall here in Regina, there was a place where shops opened just to die - in the walkway area connecting the mall to an office tower, where people are just passing though, so wouldn’t stop to shop. But the Tims people scoped it out and realised that was just the right location for them and opened a shop there, which is booming.
The folks who run Robins Doughnuts, on the other hand, aren’t good at finding locations in the same way, and aren’t nearly as successful
The one thing I admire most about TH is their marketing, particularly the TV adds. When I watch them, I know I am being manipulated, and yet I still get all choked up. I remember the asian man and his father reconciling at the arena one, the kid getting a coffee for the old neighbor who shovels the snow one, and expecially the one with the black immigrant man welcoming his family at the airport with winter coats and TH’s (aired during the Vancouver winter olympics).
When the TV news reported that emergency shipments of TH coffee were en route to our troups Afghanistan, they practically played O Canada as background music: our boys and girls OverThere™ are getting their double-doubles, the Taliban better watch out now! TH has somehow managed to wrap itself in the Canadian flag in a totally sincere, non-ironic way, which is all the more suprising in a country of people who almost seem to have a reflexive distrust of patriotism. Perhaps it’s because of the humility inherent in the unpretentious nature of a donut & coffee shop.
*
(Dammit, all this talk of fried carbs I can’t eat is making me grumpy…)*
Based on the current fashion in Montreal, I submit the possibility that the 80s are actually happening now. It’s…disturbing.
I watched a man eat a Tim’s Boston creme doughnut on the metro today, and I’ve been craving one ever since. I looked around, and I swear half the train was watching him in a way that made it clear that they were thinking the same thing as me!