Saturday, 4 January 2014

Did anyone say Hamburger?

The history of the Hamburger

The hamburger, a ground meat patty between two slices of bread, was first created in America in 1900 by Louis Lassen, a Danish immigrant, owner of Louis' Lunch in New Haven, Connecticut. There have been rival claims by Charlie Nagreen, Frank and Charles Menches, Oscar Weber Bilby, and Fletcher David.White Castle traces the origin of the hamburger to Hamburg, Germany with its invention by Otto Kuase. However, it gained national recognition at the 1904 St. Louis Worlds Fair when the New York Tribune namelessly attributed the hamburger as, "the innovation of a food vendor on the pike".No conclusive claim has ever been made to end the dispute over the inventor of the hamburger with a variety of claims and evidence asserted since its creation.

The Hamburger today

Hamburgers are usually a feature of fast foods restaurants. The hamburgers served in major fast food establishments are usually mass-produced in factories and frozen for delivery to the site. These hamburgers are thin and of uniform thickness, differing from the traditional American hamburger prepared in homes and conventional restaurants, which is thicker and prepared by hand from ground beef.

Burgers can also be made with patties made from ingredients other than beef. For example, a turkey burger uses ground turkey meat, a chicken burger uses ground chicken meat. A buffalo burger uses ground meat from a bison, and an ostrich burger is made from ground seasoned ostrich meat. A deer burger uses ground venison from a deer.
A veggie burger, garden burger or tofu burger uses a meat analogue, a meat substitute such as tofu, TVP, seitan(wheat gluten), quorn, beans, grains or an assortment of vegetables, ground up and mashed into patties.

At Red Tie we have many burger variations from the classic beef and chicken, to the ramen burger and a deep fried patty burger. This all served with hand cut fries or a fresh garden salad.

Visit us at Red Tie Cafe, Sandton View Shopping Center, 82 Homestead Avenue, Bryanston, South Africa

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