BEIJING, March 27 (Xinhuanet) -- The inventor of the
Egg McMuffin, Herb Peterson (who had a hankering for eggs Benedict), died at age
89, a Southern California McDonald's official said Wednesday.
Peterson died peacefully Tuesday
at his Santa Barbara home, said Monte Fraker, vice president of operations for
McDonald's restaurants in that city. Peterson is survived by his wife, son and
three daughters.
He began his career with McDonald's Corp. as vice
president of the company's advertising firm, D'Arcy Advertising, in Chicago. He
wrote McDonald's first national advertising slogan, "Where Quality Starts Fresh
Every Day."
Peterson eventually became a franchisee and was
currently co-owner and operator of six McDonald's restaurants in Santa Barbara
and Goleta, Fraker said. The Egg McMuffin made its debut at a restaurant in
Santa Barbara that Peterson co-owned with his son, David Peterson.
Peterson came up with idea for the signature
McDonald's breakfast item in 1972. He "was very partial to eggs Benedict,"
Fraker said, and worked on creating something similar.
The egg sandwich consisted of an egg that had been
formed in a Teflon circle with the yolk broken, topped with a slice of cheese
and grilled Canadian bacon. It was served open-faced on a toasted and buttered
English muffin.
Fraker said that, although semiretired, Peterson
still visited all six of his stores in the Santa Barbara area until last year
when his health began to deteriorate. "He would talk to the customers, visit
with the employees. He loved McDonald's."
Fraker, who said he worked with Peterson for 30
years, said "he was amazing as far as giving back to the community. He embraced
the community and the community embraced him. We loved the man."
(Agencies)