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Hamburger

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This article is about the sandwich known as a hamburger. The term hamburger is also sometimes used as a synonym for ground beef.
Hamburgers often contain lettuce, onions, and other toppings, as shown here.
Hamburgers often contain lettuce, onions, and other toppings, as shown here.

A hamburger (or, less frequently, a hamburg, or in the United Kingdom, a beefburger) is a variant on a sandwich involving a patty of ground meat that is almost always beef. The meat can be grilled, fried, or broiled, and is generally served with various condiments inside a bun baked specially for this purpose. Burgers are often served with french fries.

Hamburgers are a common picnic and party food cooked outdoors on barbecue grills.

Many fast food restaurants rely heavily on the hamburger sandwich for the bulk of their sales. The McDonald's chain of restaurants sells a burger called the Big Mac that is possibly the best known hamburger, and certainly the world's best selling. Another major fast-food chain, Burger King, sells a burger called the Whopper.

Contents

Etymology

The name comes from the German city of Hamburg, a person from Hamburg being a "Hamburger"; by extension inanimate objects such as ground beef patties that either originated or enjoyed early popularity there took the same name. (Unlike the city it is derived from, the word "hamburger" is spelled as a common noun, with a lowercase letter "H".) Originally a ground beef patty was known as "Hamburger steak" (first mentioned in an American cookbook in 1891); when this was put between bread or in a bun it was called a "Hamburger sandwich". By the mid 20th century both terms were commonly shortened to "hamburger" or simply "burger". The term burger has now become generic, and may refer to sandwiches that have ground meat fillings other than a beef patty.

History

The hamburger's history is disputed. There is a description of something that is almost certainly similar in Roman texts. In Hamburg it was common to put a piece of roast pork into a roll days, called Rundstück warm, although this is missing the essence of the modern hamburger, that the meat first be ground.

Seymour, Wisconsin claims to have invented the modern hamburger. Charlie Nagreen tried selling fried meatballs at the Outagamie County fair in 1885, but customers found them hard to eat while walking around the fair, so Nagreen flattened it and made it into a sandwich he called the "hamburger." Seymour is home to the Hamburger Hall of Fame and the world's largest hamburger, weighing in at 8,266 pounds (3,749 kg).

Another claim is made by a small lunch counter in the town of New Haven, Connecticut, named Louis' Lunch. It is sometimes credited with having invented this quick businessman's meal for busy office workers in the late 19th Century. Louis Lunch was still serving hamburgers from its closet-sized original location in the 1970s, and the restaurant still serves burgers from its relocated stand since then.

Due to widely prevalent anti-German sentiment during the First World War, hamburgers were renamed "salisbury steaks" for the duration; their popularity even after the war was severely depressed until the White Castle chain of restaurants created a business model featuring sales of large numbers of small hamburgers (later sometimes called "sliders," "grease grenades," "gut bombs" and other dysphemisms) in the mid-1920s. The fast-food hamburger began its ascent to modern popularity when Ray Kroc opened the first McDonald's franchise in the mid-1950s.

Ingredients

Wikibooks
Wikibooks Cookbook has a section about:

  Hamburger

The name hamburger may appear misleading, as some people think that the name refers to its main ingredient— which is not "ham"— when in actuality, as noted earlier in this article, the name refers to the town of Hamburg, Germany.

A commercial hamburger usually contains no ham or other pork product. It is made primarily of ground beef, although it may also contain spices and other ingredients. This is also known as a beef hamburger or a "beefburger". A beef hamburger that contains no other ingredients besides the beef itself is referred to as an "all beef hamburger" or "all beef patties". Some prepare their patties with egg, bread crumbs, onions, parsely or other ingredients.

Recent years have seen the increasing popularity of new types of "burgers" in which alternatives to ground beef are used as the primary ingredient. For example, a turkey burger uses ground turkey meat, a chicken burger uses either ground chicken meat or chicken fillets, a buffalo burger uses ground meat from a bison, and a veggie burger or tofu burger uses a meat substitute (such as tofu, TVP, seitan, or an assortment of vegetables, ground up and mashed into patties).

Serving style

Methods of serving hamburgers vary considerably in different countries.

United States

In American restaurants, burgers are served in 2 main types, fast food hamburgers, and ones served at sit down restaurants. The latter is traditionally offered "with everything" (or "all the way," "the works," or in some regions "dressed") which includes lettuce, tomato, onion, and often a pickle (or pickle relish). Cheese (usually American processed cheese, but often cheddar, Swiss, or bleu, either melted on the meat patty or crumbled on top) is generally an option and technically makes it a "cheeseburger" instead of a "hamburger." Condiments are usually offered separately ("on the side"), most commonly mustard and ketchup, although mayonnaise and other salad dressings are popular, as are salsa and other kinds of peppers. Heinz 57 sauce is popular among die-hard burger enthusiasts. Other popular toppings include bacon and guacamole, fried egg, feta cheese, sliced mushrooms, mushroom sauce, chili (with or without beans), slices of ham, tartar sauce, or slices of jalapeno peppers. Standard toppings on hamburgers can vary by geographical region, particularly at restaurants that are not national or regional franchises. In portions of the Carolinas, for instance, a hamburger "with everything" may be served with cheese, chili, onions, mustard, and cole slaw (usually a vinegar-heavy slaw with little or no mayonnaise.) Some restaurants, attempting to make a time-honored dish seem more novel, use foreign ingredients such as teriyaki sauce. A hamburger with two patties is a "double hamburger", while a hamburger with three patties is a "triple hamburger". Doubles and triples are often combined with cheese and occasionally with bacon as well, yielding a "double bacon cheeseburger" or a "triple bacon cheeseburger", or, alternatively, a "bacon double/triple cheeseburger." Fast food hamburgers have thinner patties than their fancier counterparts. They are usually already packaged with a variety of condiments. A fast food hamburger without one of these condiments may be specially ordered. Due to the recent Atkins diet fad, many restaurants are offering their hamburgers without a bun, and wrapping them instead with lettuce, cutting down on carbs.

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom hamburger patties - usually known either as "beefburgers" or just "burgers" - are either specified as 100% beef (wih seasoning) or they often can incorporate extra ingredients such as egg, onion, breadcrumbs and have a sausage-like taste and texture. Burgers also tend to be described by their combined uncooked weight, with a single uncooked burger a nominal four ounces; so, instead of a "double hamburger" one might encounter an 'eight-ounce burger', and so on. The dressings used are usually lettuce, tomato and onion with various condiments including ketchup, mayonaise, brown sauce, chilli sauce or mustard or additions such as fried eggs, cheese or bacon. The use of pickles is less common outside of U.S. dominated franchises such as Mcdonalds.

Hamburgers are often available from mobile kiosks, particularly at outdoor events such football matches. Burgers from this type of outlet are usually served without any form of salad - only fried onions and a choice of sauce (usually just tomato ketchup or brown sauce).

Australasia

Australian and New Zealand hamburgers generally include tomato, lettuce, cheese, and meat (with BBQ or tomato sauce) as minimum, and can optionally include beetroot, onion, egg, bacon, and pineapple (aka "burger with the lot").

Japan

In Japan, hamburgers are almost never made at home as sandwiches, but more as something closer to salisbury steak, which is refered to as a hamburg (ハンバーグ). Although this is also the case at many restaurants, a separate word, hamburger (ハンバーガー), is used for the sandwich. These are almost exclusively the realm of McDonald's restaurants in Japan, but there are some home grown hamburger chain restaurants (for example, Mos Burger) which serve what many consider to be excellent, if unusual, hamburgers.

A patty melt is a sandwich consisting of a hamburger patty, sautéed onions and cheese between two sliced of rye bread. The sandwich is then grilled so that the cheese melts thoroughly.

Nutritional facts of some popular hamburgers


Item Serving size (g) Calories (kcal) Fats (g) Protein (g) Carbohydrates (g) Cholesterol (mg) Sodium (mg)
Big Mac® 219 600 33 25 50 85 1050
Whopper® ? 700 42 31 52 85 1020


External links

de:Hamburger fr:Hamburger ja:ハンバーガー ko:햄버거 nl:Hamburger pl:Hamburger sv:Hamburgare zh-tw:漢堡

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