You Won’t Believe these 6 Weird KFC Items Sold Around the World
KFC’s international menus look very different from what customers see in the United States. In many countries, the chain adapts its food to match local tastes, traditional dishes, and popular street snacks. That approach has led to menu items that feel unexpected to American customers but were officially sold in real locations.
Here are six confirmed menu items that show how far the brand has pushed experimentation.
Chizza (Philippines and International Markets)

Image via Wikimedia Commons/Ceeseven
The Chizza replaces pizza dough with a full fried chicken fillet, then layers tomato sauce, melted cheese, and pepperoni directly on top.
It launched in the Philippines in 2015 and later appeared in several international markets, eventually reaching the United States for a limited run. The flavor profile was familiar, but the structure immediately stood out.
Double Down Dog (Philippines)
The Double Down Dog pushed the chicken-as-bread idea into hot dog territory. Instead of a bun, a fried chicken fillet wrapped around a cheese-stuffed sausage, finished with sauces.
This release reinforced the Philippines as one of KFC’s most experimental test markets.
Deep-Fried Corn Soup (Japan)
In Japan, KFC released a fried snack shaped like a nugget that contained hot corn soup inside. Once bitten, the shell opened into thick corn potage with kernels and creamy broth. Corn soup already has a place in Japanese comfort food culture, so turning it into a portable fried snack connected with familiar tastes.
Shrimp Donut (Thailand)
Thailand introduced a ring-shaped fried shrimp snack that visually resembled a donut while delivering a savory seafood bite.
It was made with shrimp paste, formed into a ring, battered, and fried. Seafood-based fried snacks are already part of Southeast Asian street food culture, so the concept matched local expectations while still surprising global audiences.
Shrimp Burger (China)
China’s KFC menu extends far beyond chicken, and the shrimp burger shows how flexible the brand can be when adapting to local demand. The patty often contains visible shrimp pieces.
The product fits into a broader pattern across Asian markets where seafood holds equal status with poultry and beef.
Edible Coffee Cup (United Kingdom)
In the United Kingdom, KFC experimented with edible packaging by serving coffee in cups made from layered cookies and white chocolate.
The cup could hold hot liquid, then be eaten after the drink was finished. The idea combined novelty with sustainability messaging.
Even as a short-term promotion, it remains one of the brand’s most unusual product concepts tied to packaging rather than food itself.