So... a Cheese Frenchee looks like a close cousin of the Monte Cristo, an east-coast misinterpretation of the croque monseur. Throughout the '80s and '90s it was impossible to get a Monte Cristo that wasn't deep-fried but nowadays it's basically a batter-dipped grilled-ham-and-cheese sandwich made with french toast that's been grilled and they're fucking delicious. Chislic is Shashlik without the yogurt sauce. Trust me. Tzatziki elevates the shit out of that. I subsisted off of "Runzas" when I was a kid (I stopped eating with my family about age 12). I, too, was ashamed of this. Then I got a subscription to Gourmet Magazine and discovered that when you substitute the velveeta for gruyere it becomes something pompous and french the name of which I forget. Chili and cinnamon rolls is pretty fucked up, tho. That's okay. I spend 5 months a year in the place that perpetrated chicken and waffles on an unsuspecting populace. The pacific northwest, by contrast, really only has jojos, which apparently we can also blame on the midwest.
I think "skins" - as in, potato skins - are a PNW invention. (Specifically, the Rio Cafe.) Scrape the contents out of a potato and make boring white mashed potatoes with them. Take the skin of the potato and lightly oil it, put it on a baking sheet, sprinkle shredded cheese and salt and pepper on it, bake it at 425 until its crispy, put them in a basket, and serve with what nowadays would be called "aioli", and pico de gallo. YOM YOM YOM.
It's possible, sure. But TGI Friday's didn't come up with skins until their Dallas location did it in 1975, and I found a Rio Cafe menu from 1969 that had em. What's more interesting to me, is to HOPE that they weren't just invented around the same time by multiple people (the most likely case), but to think of how information traveled at that time, and how people could have found out and copied a recipe from another restaurant. The Rio Cafe was NOT in a good part of town. 1st Ave in Seattle was nasty at that time... the most porno theaters anywhere in the world, apparently. And some guy from Dallas visits Seattle... and happens to eat at the Rio? Or someone who had eaten at the Rio was a friend of a guy in Dallas and talked about their 'skins' they'd had at the Rio? I'm nostalgic for when information was scarce.