René,
I wonder what looked or sounded so creepy and disturbing at my favorite eatery in Racine (the other being Wells Brothers, where I should say I did not visit for several years)?
Was it the sight of that strange-looking Kewpee doll all over the place and printed on the burger wrapper?
I have to admit that the first time my very young grandson went there for lunch he got scared by the doll...
And I have also to say that that line on your check mentioning waste meat is a bit cryptic and disturbing.
But I can assure you that their beef is ground fresh every day... No recycled waste meat would arrive, even by mistake, on your plate. No Sir.
My wife being born and raised there, Racine was the first American city I discovered when I flew there for the first time (via Milwaukee and NY airports) from Paris in 1968. And 2 double hamburgers ''with everything'' and a large order of those always perfect curly fries, was in fact my first meal out in the U.S. And it was also my first experience ever eating at a lunch counter. I loved that first all-American meal and I have returned hundreds of times to the Kewpee.
The last time was in December 2009 when my wife and I had one of those sudden craving for a Kewpee, a walk along the lake which looks so different than in Chicago, and an urgent need to see one of those so original special expositions that the marvelous local Art Museum downtown Racine organizes regularly.
The eerie lack of traffic and the quasi absence of shoppers downtown was the only creepy phenomenon that we could observe.
The Kewpee burgers, their buns, and the fries,even the ketchup, were as good as ever, and, according to my wife who likes that strange beverage, the root beer was as flavorful as in the fifties. The old local regulars at the counter were their usual folksy cheerful, and the smiling young waitresses as efficient as always.