It's late. Your day has been crazy, you don't feel like cooking, and you're craving something specific. Sound like a problem you have here in Amarillo? Happens to me all the time. Now, I can't always just attack that craving, or that want or need to not cook at home. Money matters, right?

What if I told you that tomorrow, Friday, July 10, you could get one of those things that many of us crave for free? You'd probably turn an ear up, or in this case, open your eyes a bit bigger in anticipation of what I'm going to tell you next.

National French Fry Day

Tomorrow is National French Fry Day, and that means you can indulge in your favorite crispy potatoes as much as you want and not be judged for it. Let's face it, French Fries are one of those items we all crave at one point or another.

Some places have better fries than others, and everyone has their preference. We go as far as to break it down by best fast food fries, then best restaurant fries, and even best frozen fries. Yes, we consume a ton of those little potato strips. We dip them in different sauces, we salt or season them to perfection, and we eat away without thinking.

Free French Fries At McDonald's

One of the places always in contention for the best fast food fries is McDonald's. There's just something about those golden, crunchy on the outside, soft on the inside fries that draws you in. I know many people who go to McDonald's SIMPLY for the fries.

Well, they're handing them out for free on National French Fry Day with any minimum purchase of $1. In other words, you could order a drink and get a free medium fry. I mean, that sounds like the perfect snack to me. So go on, indulge away, and get your free fries at McDonald's tomorrow.

LOOK: 20 Discontinued McDonald's Menu Items You'll Never See Again

Discontinued McDonald's items tell the story of eight decades of quiet experiments, from a pizza that took too long to cook to a lobster roll that never made financial sense. Some disappeared overnight with no explanation, others were cut to streamline operations, and a few became cultural phenomena long after they were gone.

Gallery Credit: Stacker