DailyDirt: Hamburgers Are American (Not German)
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
If there's a food that people think is American, it's the hamburger. The original hamburger probably came from German immigrants in the late 1800s, and the first mass-produced modern hamburgers started selling in the 1920s. Some estimates say that hamburgers account for nearly 60% of all sandwiches eaten in the US (and about 7.5% of all our potatoes go towards making French fries). If you like a good burger, check out some of these links.- Joe's Cable Car Restaurant has been serving a legendary greasy burger in San Francisco since 1965. If you want to try one, you'd better move fast because the restaurant is closing forever on March 16th. [url]
- Pornburger promotes all kinds of delicious variations of the hamburger. This "Full Monty" burger looks pretty good, but only if you like burgers dripping in sauce and cheese. [url]
- If you always make a mess while eating a hamburger, maybe you should try using this technique. Apparently, this method was devised by a Japanese TV show. [url]
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Filed Under: burger, eating, food, hamburgers, sandwiches
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Hamburger, Berliner, Wiener ...
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Local Legend
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The [url] links at the end of each item show you the full URL.
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Not nailed down..... America claims it
PROBABLY ?
Stopped reading right there. You can't claim "not German" and "are American" when you have a very loose "probably" as the measure of accuracy.
I am sure with a 99% probability that you don't know the TIME when hamburgers originated. So dismiss the fact of it's name, the fact of first seeing it in America from German immigrants.
America has a history of claiming "they invented it" when they didn't.
Americans invented St Patrick’s Day (oh that's the latest one- google it)
Americans invented apple pie
.......... blah lightbulb ..... blah ....electricity.... on and on.... etc.... etc...
America did create Fast Food & Morbid Obesity.
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usa usa usa usa
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Proto-Hamburgers were eaten in ancient Rome
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Re: Not nailed down..... America claims it
Sandwich
It was named after John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, an 18th-century English aristocrat. It is said that he ordered his valet to bring him meat tucked between two pieces of bread.
The Oxford English Dictionary gives its appearance as 1762.
But only in America did people first put meat between bread, in 1900. Am not even going to get into sausage without sheep intestines. People have put meat in sheep intestines since the 13th century.
Another American "claim" doesn't add up.
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Re: Re: Not nailed down..... America claims it
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aubergine didn't exist before America created the eggplant
Seeing as the opposing argument is a "probable" against some facts. If anything... I am opposing the straw man argument with facts that make probability greater for the "no America didn't create the hamburger" argument.
First (found) recorded use of the term "hamburger" does not equal the creation of the item known as a hamburger.
Now that is a staw man argument. Can't prove America invented the item known as a hamburger, proves the the first found usage of the word hamburger as being in America.
Using that* argument logic.... America also invented the eggplant.
The origin of the word sandwich is not relevant ?
Claims America invented the meat sandwich known as a hamburger, BECAUSE of the claim that it was the first time a meat "patty" was put in between bread as a sandwich. Think you will find that is relevant.
The origin of the meat "patty" is also relevant as I alluded to with the origin of the word sausage.
More relevance... Bread has been around for about 12,000 years that we know of, it was never married with beef to create a hamburger before a few years ago.
Also... the word "bap" dates from the 16th century.
AKA.. bun to Americans. But the Hamburger bun was invented in 1915 "according to Americans".
The kicker of relevance... America's narcissistic Nationalism that created "the greatest country in the world" and also "invented all the things" that it didn't invent.
Yep... seems legit that "America invented the food now known as the Hamburger".
Take what "probable" you want. I know what is more plausible to me. It aint "German Immigrants invented it in America" then it was named "hamburger" and coincidentally was only invented (like lot's of other supposed American food inventions) when the rise of restaurants in America started.
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Re: Re: Re: Not nailed down..... America claims it
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Re: Hamburger, Berliner, Wiener ...
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Re: Not nailed down..... America claims it
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Re: Hamburger, Berliner, Wiener ...
Every one a *great* choice for breakfast!
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Re: Berliner is a food name???
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Re: Hamburger, Berliner, Wiener ...
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