MOS Burger
File:MOS Burger logo.png
'Making people happy through food'
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Public KK | |
Traded as | TYO: 8153 |
Industry | Foodservice |
Founded | Tokyo, Japan (July 21, 1972 ) |
Founder | Atsushi Sakurada (櫻田 厚 Sakurada Atsushi?) |
Headquarters | ThinkPark Tower 2-1-1 Osaki, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo, 141-6029 Japan |
Key people
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Atsushi Sakurada, (CEO and President) |
Products | |
Revenue | $ 663 million (FY 2012) (¥ 62.371 billion) (FY 2012) |
$ 16 million (FY 2012) (¥ 1.52 billion) (FY 2012) | |
Number of employees
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1,166 (as of March 2013) |
Subsidiaries | 9 |
Website | Official website |
Footnotes / references [1][2] |
MOS Food Services, Inc. (株式会社モスフードサービス Kabushiki-kaisha Mosu Fūdo Sābisu?), doing business as MOS Burger (モスバーガー Mosu bāgā?) (Japanese, "MOS" [mosɯ̥] or "Mountain Ocean Sun"), is a fast-food restaurant chain (fast-casual) that originated in Japan.
It is now the second-largest fast-food franchise in Japan after McDonald's Japan (an independent Japanese company), and owns numerous overseas outlets over East Asia, including Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Thailand, Indonesia, Australia, South Korea and, until 2005, Hawaii. It is also the name of the standard hamburger offered by the restaurant, being its first product when it opened in 1972.
Its headquarters are in the ThinkPark Tower in Ōsaki, Shinagawa, Tokyo.[1] At one time its headquarters were in Shinjuku, Tokyo.[3][4]
As of February 2014 the publicly traded company runs 1,730 MOS BURGER and several AEN, Chef's V and GREEN GRILL stores. One slogan used within its stores is "Japanese Fine Burger and Coffee".[1]
In April 2011, MOS Burger opened its first store at Sunnybank Plaza, in Brisbane, Queensland Australia. As of March 2013, the company had five stores in Australia.[5]
Contents
Unique burgers
MOS Rice Burger
The MOS Rice Burger uses a bun made of rice mixed with barley and millet.
Rice was first used as a bun in 1987, when the restaurant served the Tsukune Rice Burger, filled with ground chicken and daikon, and seasoned with soy sauce. The Tsukune Rice Burger is no longer on the menu in Japan.
The MOS Rice Burgers currently include the 'kaisen kakiage rice burger' ('fresh seafood shrimp fritter rice burger'), the 'kinpira rice burger' ('fried burdock and carrot rice burger'), and the 'buta shōga yaki rice burger' ('grilled pork and ginger rice burger'). There used to be a 'yakiniku rice burger' ('grilled strips of beef rice burger') (available in Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and Brisbane Australia branches).
The MOS Rice Burger has been imitated by the Taiwanese division of McDonalds,[6] where the rice bun was pan-seared, but it remains a MOS-exclusive item in Japan and other markets.
Takumi Burger
In 2003, MOS Burger introduced an ultra-premium Takumi Burger (meaning artisan taste) series, which was expanded further in 2004.[7] The 'Nippon's Burger Takumi' hamburger was made with Tasmanian beef and ten toppings, including sliced avocado, grated wasabi, and other gourmet, seasonal ingredients. It was available for a limited time and cost 1,000 yen (9.14 euros or 11.72 USD at the time), making it one of the most expensive burgers offered by a fast-food chain. The 'Nippon's Burger Takumi Lettuce' was added in 2004, with lettuce instead of buns to sandwich the hamburger.[8]
Gallery
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References
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- ↑ Taipei Times
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External links
- Official website (English)
- Official website (Japanese)
- Mos Burger Taiwan (Chinese)
- Mos Burger Hong Kong (Chinese)
- Mos Burger Singapore (English)
- Mos Burger Korea (Korean)
- Daily Yomiuri interview with MOS Burger president Takao Shimizu
- Story on Mos Burger in Hawaii
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Official website not in Wikidata
- Articles with Japanese-language external links
- Articles with Chinese-language external links
- Articles with Korean-language external links
- Fast-food chains of Japan
- Companies based in Tokyo
- Companies listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange
- Fast-food hamburger restaurants
- Japanese restaurants
- Restaurants in Japan
- Restaurants established in 1972
- 1972 establishments in Japan
- Fast-food chains of Singapore