McDonald's Japan is now selling its springtime season-limited Thick-Cut Spicy Bacon Teritama, as the newest addition to its Teritama lineup.
This latest Teritama burger version adds a spicy kick to the sweet teriyaki sauce with habanero mayo sauce and spicy bacon. The burger's other ingredients include beef patty, fried egg, and lettuce.
Wrapped in a cherry blossom-designed paper that evoked the feeling of spring, the Thick-Cut Spicy Bacon Teritama burger has a thick slab of bacon sticking out and the yellow habanero mayo sauce on top of the lettuce.
The wrapper has a warning for those who “don't like spicy tastes."
McDonald's Japan is offering the Thick-Cut Spicy Bacon Teritama only this spring.


India–U.S. Interim Trade Pact Cuts Auto Tariffs but Leaves Tesla Out
Parents abused by their children often suffer in silence – specialist therapy is helping them find a voice
Nvidia, ByteDance, and the U.S.-China AI Chip Standoff Over H200 Exports
Uber Ordered to Pay $8.5 Million in Bellwether Sexual Assault Lawsuit
Locked up then locked out: how NZ’s bank rules make life for ex-prisoners even harder
CK Hutchison Launches Arbitration After Panama Court Revokes Canal Port Licences
Japan Economy Poised for Q4 2025 Growth as Investment and Consumption Hold Firm
Canada’s local food system faces major roadblocks without urgent policy changes
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Says AI Investment Boom Is Just Beginning as NVDA Shares Surge
The Beauty Beneath the Expressway: A Journey from Self to Service
The American mass exodus to Canada amid Trump 2.0 has yet to materialize
Trump Signs Executive Order Threatening 25% Tariffs on Countries Trading With Iran
American Airlines CEO to Meet Pilots Union Amid Storm Response and Financial Concerns
Why a ‘rip-off’ degree might be worth the money after all – research study
SoftBank Shares Slide After Arm Earnings Miss Fuels Tech Stock Sell-Off
Britain has almost 1 million young people not in work or education – here’s what evidence shows can change that
How to support someone who is grieving: five research-backed strategies 



