PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Whataburger Introduces Whatacatch Fish Taco and Spicy Tartar Sauce

Limited-time, meat-free options add to the thousands of made-to-order possibilities

Whataburger Introduces Whatacatch Fish Taco and Spicy Tartar Sauce
2011-03-10
SAN ANTONIO, TX, March 10, 2011 (Press-News.org) Just in time for the Lenten season, Whataburger is offering customers the meat-free option of a Whatacatch fish taco and spicy tartar sauce for a limited-time. Now through May 1, fans can choose to substitute Whataburger's original tartar sauce with a spicier alternative to add a southwestern touch to their Whatacatch taco or sandwich.

The Whatacatch taco includes breaded, sliced white fish filet wrapped up in a warm flour tortilla, accompanied with crisp lettuce and topped off with a choice of Whataburger's original or spicy tartar sauce.

"We're happy to bring the Whatacatch fish taco to our customers, along with the option to add spicy tartar sauce." said Rich Scheffler, Whataburger Restaurants, LP Group Director of Marketing. "Both are unique limited-time offerings that we think our customers will truly enjoy during the Lenten season."

Whataburger's Whatacatch fish taco and spicy tartar sauce will be available through May 1. Guests can also choose to add the limited-time spicy tartar sauce to their favorite Whatacatch sandwich creations or choose to have regular tartar sauce on either fish offering.

Complete nutritional information can be found on Whataburger's website.

ABOUT WHATABURGER:
Whataburger has focused on its fresh, made-to-order burgers and friendly customer service since 1950 when Harmon Dobson opened the first Whataburger as a small roadside burger stand in Corpus Christi, Texas. Dobson gave his restaurant a name he hoped to hear customers say every time they took a bite of his made-to-order burgers: "What a burger!" Within the first week, people lined up around the block for his 25 cent, all-American beef burgers served on five-inch buns. Today, the company is headquartered in San Antonio, Texas, with more than 700 locations in 10 states. Visit www.whataburger.com for more information on the company.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Whataburger Introduces Whatacatch Fish Taco and Spicy Tartar Sauce Whataburger Introduces Whatacatch Fish Taco and Spicy Tartar Sauce 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

TinyVox Selected as Finalist for Microsoft BizSpark Accelerator at SXSW

2011-03-10
TinyVox, the free iPhone app that makes it fun and easy to tape and share audio files on social networks or email, was named a finalist in the Microsoft BizSpark Accelerator at SXSW, where early stage technology companies demo innovative new technology for influential industry judges and a live audience. The contest is sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark, The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, IBM, .CO, and Turner Broadcasting System. TinyVox is one of 40 finalists in five categories out of more than 400 applicants. "TinyVox helps SXSW attendees capture and transmit ...

Free Cloud Computing Apps: New semYOU App Store - The Competition to Google's Apps Marketplace

2011-03-10
The new app store for the free semYOU app computing system heralds the future of software use: a large number of ad-free, no-cost apps offering entertainment, tools, games and management are now available at www.semyou.com. The apps are based on the latest Microsoft Silverlight technology and offer all the advantages of cloud computing. Startup semYOU thus represents true competition against Google's Apps Marketplace. Applications are now available on local computers, easily, free of charge and on demand: a mail program, media player, word processing tools, games or ...

Smoking abstinence found more effective with residential treatment

2011-03-09
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- In the March issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, researchers report that residential treatment for tobacco dependence among heavy smokers greatly improves the odds of abstinence at six months compared with standard outpatient treatment. The study reports that 52 percent of the patients were still not smoking six months after residential treatment, compared with 26 percent in the outpatient treatment setting. "This means there is hope for patients who are tobacco dependent and feel they have exhausted every other means of trying to quit smoking," says ...

The underemployed -- increasing and overlooked

2011-03-09
RENO, Nev. – While unemployment has been a frequent topic of discussion during the recession, underemployment and its effects have not, even though the number of underemployed workers has also increased. A study published online last week in the Journal of Management, "'I Have a Job, But…' A Review of Underemployment," by University of Nevada, Reno Assistant Professor Frances M. McKee-Ryan and University of Alabama Assistant Professor Jaron Harvey brings attention to the topic and its potentially detrimental effects to individuals, organizations and society. The study ...

Hit multiple targets for maximum benefit in HER2-positive breast cancer, studies suggest

2011-03-09
Combining targeted therapies might be required for maximum anti-tumor activity when treating HER2-positive breast cancers, according to two new studies by Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center (VICC) investigators. The findings, reported in two papers in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), suggest that upregulation of the HER3 receptor limits the effectiveness of two classes of targeted therapies (HER2- and PI3 kinase-targeted therapies). Therefore targeting HER3 together with these agents should improve their clinical utility. Around 25 percent of ...

1 in 5 children in Sweden is overweight

2011-03-09
Researchers at the Sahlgrenska Academy – University of Gothenburg, Sweden - and Karolinska Institutet have carried out the first ever national study of the prevalence of overweight and obesity in schoolchildren. It reveals that one in five children in Sweden is overweight, and that there is a link between low levels of education and overweight children. Published in the online version of the journal Obesity Reviews, the study was part of a European project, the WHO European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative, that involved 14 European countries. "There has previously ...

Intelligence analysts need not fear 'Watson,' study shows

2011-03-09
The artificial intelligence program "Watson" may have outsmarted human competitors on the television quiz show "Jeopardy!" recently, but it would have to go a long way to best an intelligence analyst, according to Kristan Wheaton, J.D., associate professor of intelligence studies at Mercyhurst College. On Feb. 14-16, the reigning champions of Jeopardy! – Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter – faced a formidable new competitor – a supercomputer named Watson under development by IBM for four years. Watson defeated his adversaries handily. Wheaton's graduate students recently ...

UCLA performs first hand transplant in the western United States

UCLA performs first hand transplant in the western United States
2011-03-09
Surgeons at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center performed the first hand transplant in the western United States in an operation that began one minute before midnight on Friday, March 4, and was completed 14-and-a-half hours later, on Saturday, March 5. The transplant was performed on a 26-year-old mother from Northern California who lost her right hand in a traffic accident nearly five years ago. UCLA is only the fourth center in the nation to offer this procedure, and the first west of the Rockies. This was the 13th hand transplant surgery performed in the United States. ...

Text messaging helps smokers break the habit

2011-03-09
EUGENE, Ore. -- A pair of related studies on smoking cessation by researchers at the University of Oregon and other institutions have isolated the brain regions most active in controlling urges to smoke and demonstrated the effectiveness of text-messaging to measure and intervene in those urges. Both projects used the same group of test subjects -- 27 heavy smokers recruited from the American Lung Association's Freedom From Smoking program in Los Angeles. Elliot Berkman, professor of psychology at the UO, and colleagues Emily Falk at the University of Michigan and Matthew ...

3-D tracking of single molecules inside cells

2011-03-09
WASHINGTON, D.C. (March 8, 2011) -- Researchers at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and the University of Texas at Dallas are reporting today at the 55th Annual Biophysical Society Annual Meeting in Baltimore, MD how they are using a novel 3D cell imaging method for studying the complex spatial-temporal dynamics of protein transport, providing a solution to this fundamental problem in cell biology. According to the authors of the study, imaging such highly dynamic processes in the cell and in 3D poses major technical challenges in a complex cell monolayer ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Breaking free from dependence on rare resources! A domestic high-performance permanent magnet emerges!

Symptoms of long-COVID can last up to two years after infection with COVID-19

Violence is forcing women in Northern Ireland into homelessness, finds new report

Latin American intensivists denounce economic and cultural inequities in the global scientific publishing system

Older adults might be more resistant to bird flu infections than children, Penn research finds

Dramatic increase in research funding needed to counter productivity slowdown in farming

How chemistry and force etch mysterious spiral patterns on solid surfaces

Unraveling the mysteries of polycystic kidney disease

Mother’s high-fat diet can cause liver stress in fetus, study shows

Weighing in on a Mars water debate

Researchers ‘seq’ and find a way to make pig retinal cells to advance eye treatments

Re-purposed FDA-approved drug could help treat high-grade glioma

Understanding gamma rays in our universe through StarBurst

Study highlights noninvasive hearing aid 

NASA taps UTA to shape future of autonomous aviation

Mutations disrupt touch-based learning, study finds

Misha lived in zoos, but the elephant’s tooth enamel helps reconstruct wildlife migrations

Eat better, breathe easier? Research points to link between diet, lung cancer

Mesozoic mammals had uniform dark fur

Wartime destruction of Kakhovka Dam in Ukraine has long-term environmental consequences

NIH’s flat 15% funding policy is misguided and damaging

AI reveals new insights into the flow of Antarctic ice

Scientists solve decades-long Parkinson’s mystery

Spinning, twisted light could power next-generation electronics

A planetary boundary for geological resources: Limits of regional water availability

Astronomy’s dirty window to space

New study reveals young, active patients who have total knee replacements are unlikely to need revision surgery in their lifetime

Thinking outside the box: Uncovering a novel approach to brainwave monitoring

Combination immunotherapy before surgery may increase survival in people with head and neck cancer

MIT engineers turn skin cells directly into neurons for cell therapy

[Press-News.org] Whataburger Introduces Whatacatch Fish Taco and Spicy Tartar Sauce
Limited-time, meat-free options add to the thousands of made-to-order possibilities