Business
10 Must-Know Secrets About Ford’s Garage USA Burgers That’ll Make You Crave One Now
ORLANDO, Fla. — Ford’s Garage USA has turned the humble hamburger into a full sensory experience, blending juicy half-pound Black Angus patties with a nostalgic 1920s service station vibe that keeps customers rolling back for more in 2026.

The popular chain, founded in 2012 in Fort Myers, Florida, near Henry Ford’s winter home, has grown into a thriving collection of locations across Florida, Ohio, Kentucky and beyond. Each restaurant immerses diners in vintage Ford memorabilia, classic cars and gas pumps while serving what many call some of the best gourmet burgers around.
Here are 10 essential things every burger lover should know about the Ford’s Garage USA burger experience this year.
First, every signature burger starts with a fresh, never-frozen half-pound Black Angus beef patty seasoned to perfection. The beef is grilled to order and never compromised on quality, delivering that perfect juicy bite with a smoky char that stands out from frozen or pre-formed alternatives at many casual chains.
Second, the menu’s “Burgers of Fame” section features creative, craveable combinations served on soft brioche buns branded with the Ford’s Garage logo. Standouts include the Ford’s Signature Burger, piled high with sharp cheddar, applewood-smoked bacon, bourbon BBQ sauce, crisp lettuce, tomato and red onion. It won a recent customer bracket vote with 62 percent of the tally, earning its place as a crowd favorite.
Third, the BBQ Brisket Burger delivers serious indulgence: cheddar cheese, bourbon BBQ sauce, hickory-smoked brisket, applewood bacon, red onions and crispy onion straws stacked on that signature patty. It’s a meat-lover’s dream that pairs perfectly with the restaurant’s extensive craft beer selection.
Fourth, Ford’s Garage offers variety beyond beef. The Bison Bacon Burger swaps in leaner bison for a slightly gamier flavor, while the Green and Clean provides a hearty vegetarian option. The Estate Burger brings luxury with smoked gouda, sweet red onion marmalade, arugula, tomato, fried onion straws and white truffle bacon aioli — often cited as one of the most Instagram-worthy and flavorful creations on the menu.
Fifth, the Model “A” Burger nods to automotive history with classic toppings that honor the brand’s roots. Other creative names like the High-Octane (for spice lovers) and Jiffy Burger keep the menu fun and approachable. Many locations localize names to honor local figures, adding a personal touch that makes each visit feel unique.
Sixth, burgers come standard with Ford’s Fries — thick-cut and served with Heinz ketchup — creating a complete, satisfying meal. Guests can upgrade sides or build platters, including Roadster Burger platters with multiple one-third-pound mini burgers for sharing or larger groups.
Seventh, the atmosphere elevates the entire burger experience. Diners sit surrounded by vintage Ford vehicles, tools, signage and memorabilia inside a meticulously designed 1920s garage setting. The theme isn’t just decorative — it ties directly to the brand’s licensed partnership with Ford Motor Company, the first time the automaker allowed its name and imagery for a restaurant concept.
Eighth, Ford’s Garage pairs its burgers brilliantly with craft beer. Each location boasts a large rotating selection of drafts and bottles, making it easy to find the perfect pour to complement smoky barbecue notes, rich cheeses or spicy toppings. Signature cocktails and milkshakes round out the drink menu for non-beer drinkers.
Ninth, quality and freshness remain non-negotiable. Patties are formed daily, toppings use premium ingredients like applewood bacon and natural cheeses, and the kitchen emphasizes made-to-order preparation. Nutrition information updated in January 2026 shows transparency, with calorie counts ranging from around 750 for a basic American Standard to over 1,000 for loaded specialties when including fries.
Tenth, the chain continues expanding thoughtfully in 2026 while staying true to its neighborhood burger-and-beer joint roots. New locations maintain the same high standards, and the menu evolves with seasonal specials and customer feedback. The focus on comfort food extends beyond burgers to sandwiches, salads, appetizers and desserts, ensuring something for every appetite.

Reviewers consistently praise the juicy texture, generous toppings and overall value. Many call the Ford’s Signature or Estate Burger among the best they’ve had at a casual chain, with the fun theme making family dinners, date nights or group outings more memorable. Service is generally described as friendly and efficient, though peak times can mean slightly longer waits for made-to-order food.
Prices remain reasonable for the portion size and quality, with most signature half-pound burgers falling in the $17 to $21 range depending on location and toppings. Gluten-free bun options and modifications accommodate various dietary needs.
Ford’s Garage has carved a distinctive niche by combining automotive nostalgia with seriously good food. The concept proves that a strong theme, when executed well, enhances rather than overshadows the menu. Diners don’t just eat a burger — they step into a lively, Instagram-ready environment that celebrates American ingenuity and classic cars.
As the chain grows, it faces the usual challenges of maintaining consistency across locations, but current feedback suggests the kitchen and front-of-house teams are delivering. The burgers remain the star, backed by a huge craft beer list and comfortable, themed seating that encourages lingering.
For first-timers, starting with the Ford’s Signature or American Standard provides a solid introduction to the brand’s style. Adventurous eaters should try the BBQ Brisket or Estate for bolder flavors. Vegetarian guests won’t feel left out with solid plant-based options.
The appeal crosses generations. Families enjoy the visual spectacle of the vintage cars, while craft beer enthusiasts appreciate the thoughtful tap list. Young adults and couples find the energetic yet welcoming vibe perfect for casual nights out.
In an era when many restaurants chase trends, Ford’s Garage doubles down on what works: quality beef, inventive yet approachable toppings, and an immersive setting that feels both nostalgic and fresh. The result is a burger experience that stands out without trying too hard.
Whether you’re craving a classic cheeseburger done right or something loaded with brisket and bourbon sauce, Ford’s Garage delivers with automotive flair and flavorful execution. The chain’s continued popularity in 2026 proves that great burgers, good beer and a fun atmosphere never go out of style.
Next time the craving hits, consider pulling into Ford’s Garage. Just don’t be surprised if one visit turns into a regular pit stop — the burgers are that good, and the garage doors are always open.
Business
US buyers redirect imported fertilizer overseas as Iran war drives up global prices

US buyers redirect imported fertilizer overseas as Iran war drives up global prices
Business
U.S. extends Russian oil sanctions waiver amid global supply squeeze

U.S. extends Russian oil sanctions waiver amid global supply squeeze
Business
So what is the real oil price right now?
In the midst of the latest Gulf conflict, oil has been an economic weapon and propaganda tool. Both Tehran and the US had been blockading shipments through the vital Strait of Hormuz waterway before at least a temporary reopening on Friday, and trying to jawbone the market in their favor.
Be wary of anyone saying one particular oil-price gauge matters more than the others. Whoever is betting on the cost of crude going up will argue Friday’s relief selloff doesn’t reflect reality, with shipping still severely disrupted. Those betting on a fall will have had their own views confirmed.
BloombergBroadly speaking, the oil market is split in two. The first part is the physical market, where real barrels change hands and they can be touched, smelled, almost savored. The second is visible only on computer screens. These are the printed financial contracts such as swaps, futures and options that change hands in electronic marketplaces. Traders call them paper barrels.
The financial and physical markets are, of course, linked. But they do different jobs. The former is where traders transfer oil-price risk. By nature, it’s anticipatory. Sometimes, it prices in expected supply disruptions days, weeks or even months before they happen. And it prices supply recoveries well before the black stuff flows again. It’s a window into a possible future, a distillation of probable outcomes. It isn’t, however, a forecast, just the price buyers are willing to pay today for a barrel that would be delivered in the future.
The physical market is where traders go to buy and sell straightaway the real stuff that goes into refineries. It reflects actual supply and demand right now. The key to prices is what kind of barrels are available, and how easily they can be accessed and shipped. It’s more about logistics than mathematical models.
Crucially, the supply of paper barrels is unlimited and that of physical barrels constrained, more so during a shock. Ilia Bouchouev, an ex-oil trader now at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, estimates the physical market has lost more than 10 million barrels since the war started. But the financial market has traded an extra billion barrels when all the different paper instruments are aggregated.In normal times, the price of the financial and the physical markets are closely aligned, plus or minus certain differentials and ancillary costs. In these periods of calm, the easiest answer to “what’s the real price of oil?” is to look at any financial screen. Typically, all the paper benchmarks — Brent, West Texas Intermediate and Dubai — trade in unison, within a few dollars.
BloombergBut these aren’t normal times. Physical prices have skyrocketed as refiners hunt for any barrels for immediate delivery. What used to trade a few cents above or below the paper benchmark is being sold at a premium of $10, $15, $20 or even higher. Saudi Arabia will sell its flagship Arab Light to European customers at a premium of $27.85 in May. Last month, it was a discount of 65 cents. “Physical transactions are under a lot of strain,” Josu Jon Imaz, chief executive officer of Spanish refiner Repsol SA, says.
And this is before adding ancillary fees, which don’t feel so ancillary any more. Freight costs that used be $1 a barrel today set you back as much as $25. Insurance is a small fortune. These extra expenses don’t figure in the financial market because no one needs to physically move a paper barrel. But add them in and “the barrel of oil, door-to-door, is way above the headline price,” says HSBC Holdings Plc CEO Georges Elhedery.
This gap doesn’t mean the physical and financial markets are disconnected, or that the latter is broken, as many bloggers and Wall Street types claim. They’re simply doing different jobs and offering two different answers. In broad terms, the physical market tells the price from today to about 30 days ahead; the financial market usually from two months hence to 10 years out.
So what message is being conveyed? One of my go-to oil traders, who’s happy to impart (anonymously) the knowledge built over multiple crises, puts it simply: The physical market shows barrels are extremely tight today; but the paper market is saying that if you look at a distribution of possible outcomes a couple of months from now, there are many scenarios where that eases.
BloombergThe different timeframe is critical. In the early days of the war, the paper market was where the fears about the conflict’s impact showed up. The Brent contract surged to $120 in early March. But because of the excess supply sloshing about back then, its physical counterpart barely made it above $100. Now, the situation has inverted: The physical market is still pricing today’s scarcity; the financial market is pricing the end of the war.
The irony is that financial traders, oil speculators par excellence, have softened the Hormuz shock by pricing in its potential resolution. But oil refiners must live in the present. Security of supply overrides thoughts about price. My trader contact says refiners, particularly if state-owned, will pay whatever it takes to guarantee delivery. And they will do so in way that’s disproportionate to the actual oil shock because not having a barrel — for a country’s energy needs and critical products — is existential in a way that overpaying is not.
Geography matters to price, too. Colonial-era terminology still lives on in this market, with an imaginary vertical line dividing the world at the Suez Canal in Egypt. The current oil shock started east of there, and that’s where the physical market and shipping costs have been most affected. Back-of-the-envelope math suggests some eastern refiners are going to pay north of $175 for “landing prices” — the sum of the barrel cost, its transport expense and other elements.
The fallout is, however, moving westward. Asian refiners are shopping in the Atlantic basin, from Norway to West Africa. The cost of Dated Brent, the reference for the physical North Sea market, briefly surged to $145 this month.
Even if Hormuz reopens, as President Donald Trump promised Friday, the shock’s impact will spread further west. The US, the largest oil-producing nation, will become the barrel of last resort. This is the land of cheap oil. Its refiners are buying crude at absurdly low prices compared to Asia and Europe. And because they’re connected by pipeline, they pay regular transport costs.
How cheap is cheap? Look at the daily “Crude Oil Price Bulletin” posted by American traders, pipeline companies and refiners as a reference for physical purchases. In the April 15 edition, West Texas Intermediate was $87.77. Colorado Southeastern goes for $78.27. Wyoming Sweet is $84.87, and Nebraska Intermediate commands $77.77. A lucky refiner with access to Utah Sweet can get it for $76.98. Western Canadian Select, a benchmark for the Alberta oil sands, goes for about $72.
BloombergLooking at those prices, you grasp the geopolitical and economic significance of the US shale revolution and Canada’s oil sands. In the middle of a historic oil shock, North America is swimming in the stuff.
The ultra-low prices won’t last, however, unless Hormuz reopens fully. An armada of tankers is headed toward the US coast no matter what happens in the Persian Gulf in coming days. They’ll still load US crude even if the ceasefire holds. All things equal, North American oil costs would increase, and the rises elsewhere would be capped as eastern refiners access the US market. We’re already witnessing the start. Mars crude, pumped out of the Gulf of Mexico, is one America’s more easily exportable varieties. Earlier this week, it went for $97.30 as it becomes the go-to US crude to ship.
I hope by now you recognize the difficulty of providing an easy answer on the “real” price of oil. And there are other factors to include, too.
First, should we refer to oil in nominal terms or real terms? In the latter, adjusted by the cumulative impact of inflation, oil prices would need to spike further to match previous crises. The nearly $150 record set in 2008 in both the physical and financial Brent markets is about $220 in today’s money.
And second, should we pay more attention to the price of the refined products consumers actually buy and less to the crude that refiners purchase? During an acute shock like the Hormuz shutdown, the cost of refined products such as gasoline and jet fuel rises faster than the stuff they’re made from. Politically and economically, that’s arguably much more important.
Ultimately, if cornered I will always say the physical market is king, and the price is always what’s paid today, not two months down the road. But I will insist on an average among regions, including North America.
On that basis, let’s say the real level this week was $125 or so. In a couple of months? There, probably, I’d listen to what the speculators are saying in the financial market. So far they’ve been proved right in judging the supply disruption and now the resolution. I agree, the price is headed lower.
Business
(VIDEO) Selena Gomez and Demi Lovato Reunite After Nearly 10 Years
ORLANDO, Fla. — In a heartwarming full-circle moment that has fans declaring 2026 the “year of healing,” Selena Gomez attended the opening night of Demi Lovato’s “It’s Not That Deep” tour on April 13, marking the pair’s first public reunion in nearly a decade. The former Disney Channel stars, who rose to fame together as childhood friends and co-stars, shared emotional backstage moments and onstage praise that quickly went viral across social media.

Gomez, 33, was spotted in the audience at the Kia Center with a large bouquet of flowers for Lovato. She later took to Instagram Stories to gush over the performance, writing, “I am in tears. This was hands down one of the best shows. Oh and the VOCALS? Psh blown away.” Photos and videos of the two embracing backstage circulated rapidly, showing the pair smiling together in what many called a long-overdue reconciliation.
The reunion comes almost nine years after Gomez and Lovato were last photographed together at an InStyle event in 2017. Their friendship, which began on the set of “Barney & Friends” as toddlers and deepened during Disney projects like “Princess Protection Program,” had cooled amid public feuds, personal struggles and separate career paths. Fans had long hoped for a thaw, and Monday’s night delivered.
Lovato, 33, kicked off her tour with high energy, delivering powerhouse vocals on hits spanning her career. The night featured another Disney reunion when Joe Jonas joined her onstage for a performance of “This Is Me” from “Camp Rock.” Lovato and Jonas, who dated as teens, shared a warm duet that added another layer of nostalgia to the evening.
Industry observers noted the timing feels significant. Both women have spoken openly about mental health journeys, with Lovato addressing bipolar disorder and Gomez managing lupus and bipolar disorder. Their public support for each other signals growth and maturity after years of distance. “Nature is healing,” one viral post read, capturing the sentiment shared by millions.
Gomez arrived wearing merch from Lovato’s tour and was seen cheering enthusiastically from her box. Sources close to the pair described the night as low-key and genuine, with no cameras forced on their private reunion. Gomez’s Rare Beauty brand and Lovato’s evolving music career have kept them in the spotlight separately, but Monday’s event suggested personal bridges are being rebuilt.
Social media erupted within minutes. Hashtags like #SelenaAndDemi, #DisneyReunion and #YearOfHealing trended worldwide. Clips of Gomez wiping away tears while watching Lovato perform amassed millions of views. Fans reminisced about shared red carpets, joint songs like “Who Says” from their Disney days, and the iconic friendship that defined a generation of young stars.
The pair’s history includes well-documented ups and downs. Early friendship gave way to reported tensions around 2010-2013, fueled by overlapping careers and personal challenges. Lovato has addressed past jealousy and struggles in interviews, while Gomez focused on acting, music and producing hits like “Only Murders in the Building.” Despite rumors of lingering frostiness, both have expressed respect for each other’s paths in recent years.
Monday’s reunion adds to a wave of 2026 Disney nostalgia. Gomez has also reconnected with other former co-stars, fueling speculation about broader healing among the former mouseketeer generation. Lovato’s tour, her first major outing after health-related adjustments, appears positioned as a comeback celebration.
Critics and fans praised Lovato’s vocal performance as some of her strongest in years. The setlist blended new material from the “It’s Not That Deep” era with classics, showcasing growth from pop-rock roots to more mature, vulnerable songwriting. Gomez’s endorsement carried extra weight given her own music background and industry influence.
Representatives for both stars declined to comment on future collaborations, but the warm public display has sparked rumors of joint projects. Music insiders suggest a possible duet or joint appearance could be in the works, though nothing has been confirmed. For now, the focus remains on the genuine emotion of the night.
The event also highlighted broader themes of celebrity friendship and redemption. In an era where public feuds often play out online, Gomez and Lovato chose support and celebration. Gomez’s Instagram post, simple yet heartfelt, resonated deeply with followers who grew up watching them.
Lovato has faced her share of challenges, including publicized health scares and tour adjustments. Her decision to title the tour “It’s Not That Deep” reflects a lighter, more resilient approach. Having Gomez in attendance provided visible validation from someone who understood her journey intimately.
Gomez, balancing acting, beauty empire and personal life with fiancé Benny Blanco, continues to prioritize mental health advocacy. Her appearance at the concert, traveling to Florida amid a busy schedule, underscored the importance of the friendship. Attendees reported seeing her fully engaged, singing along and visibly moved.
The reunion has boosted streams for both artists. Lovato’s catalog saw notable increases on platforms like Spotify following the show, while Gomez’s earlier collaborations with Lovato resurfaced on fan playlists. It also reignited interest in their joint Disney film “Princess Protection Program,” which recently saw renewed viewing numbers.
As Lovato’s tour continues across North America, the opening night will be remembered as more than a concert — a cultural moment of reconciliation. For a generation that grew up with these stars, the images of Gomez and Lovato embracing feel like closure and a new beginning.
Friends, fans and fellow Disney alums flooded social media with support. Miley Cyrus, another frequent collaborator in their circle, reportedly reacted positively to the news. The moment serves as a reminder that childhood bonds can endure despite time, distance and public scrutiny.
In the days since the show, both women have maintained low profiles, letting the pictures and Gomez’s stories speak for themselves. Lovato thanked fans and special guests on her own platforms, keeping the focus on the music while acknowledging the emotional weight of the evening.
Whether this leads to further public appearances, joint music or simply private friendship remains to be seen. What is clear is that on a warm April night in Orlando, two icons who helped define an era of pop culture stood together again — older, wiser and ready for whatever comes next. For millions of fans, it was the reunion they had waited nearly a decade to witness.
The night proved that some friendships, like great songs, can withstand the test of time and find their harmony once more. As 2026 unfolds, Selena Gomez and Demi Lovato have given their supporters something precious: proof that healing is possible, even in the spotlight.
Business
5 equity mutual funds offer over 15% annualised return on SIP investments in 10 years. Check details
Five equity mutual funds have offered over 15% annualised return on SIP investments in 10 years, as reported by ETWealth. (As of April 8, 2026)
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