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In-N-Out knockoff, complete with red trays and burgers, draws crowds

By Timothy Karoff
In-I-Nout's light-up sign beckons.

In-I-Nout's light-up sign beckons.

Screenshot via Google

Picture this: You’re cruising down the highway out of Culiacán, the capital of the northwestern Mexican state of Sinaloa. It’s 9 p.m., and the last hints of blue have faded from the night sky. After a long, hot day, you’re tired and a little hungry. You miss California.

That’s when you see it. You pull over and rub your eyes, but they’re not deceiving you. “IN-I-NOUT,” the brightly lit sign reads. 

Not “In-N-Out” — “In-I-Nout.”

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It’s hard to pinpoint exactly when the copycat burger restaurant opened. Older Google Street View footage just shows a shuttered, unmarked blue building where the establishment now stands. The restaurant’s first Instagram post dates back to June, and the Google ratings started trickling in about a month ago (one reviewer gave it a 100% recommendation, while another complained of long waits and lack of air conditioning). Patrons’ photos show uncannily accurate Double-Doubles and animal fries, complete with grilled onions and spread, all served on familiar red trays. Inside, the restaurant looks, well, like a knockoff In-N-Out, complete with red booths.

The restaurant draws on In-N-Out’s nostalgia for 1950s Americana: Walls are adorned with old-school Coca-Cola and diner posters, and there’s even a diner counter. At least some customers seem to be in on the bit, too. In a viral TikTok documenting In-I-Nout, American country music plays over footage of the restaurant’s burgers. To Californians, In-N-Out is a fast food chain. But Culiacán's In-I-Nout is a symbol of a bygone time in a faraway place. 

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Maybe In-N-Out could learn a thing or two from its imitator. A photo posted on In-I-Nout’s Instagram account depicts what appear to be buffalo chicken tenders — which the real In-N-Out, with its rigidly standardized menu, has never offered. And to be honest, the fries look better than the California In-N-Out’s limp, starchy offerings

Timothy Karoff is an editorial intern at SFGATE. He hails from Massachusetts, but has lived in the Bay Area for four years. He recently graduated from Stanford University, where he studied English and ran a radio show at KZSU 90.1 FM. Email: timothy.karoff@sfgate.com