If all the hamburgers eaten by Americans in a year were arranged in a straight line, it would circle the Earth over 32 times or more!
National Hamburger Day on May 28th wraps up National Burger Month and also ushers in summer grilling season.
- 1758 – An English cookbook describes “Hamburgh sausage” as salted, minced beef shaped into patties, an early forerunner of Hamburg steak that later inspired the American hamburger.
- 1842 – American newspapers began mentioning “Hamburg steak,” a seasoned, hand-minced beef patty associated with German sailors and immigrants, served as a standalone meat dish rather than a sandwich.
- 1896 – A Chicago Tribune article refers to the growing popularity of the ‘hamburger sandwich’ amongst rail commuters.
- 1873 – Delmonico’s in New York City lists “Hamburg steak” on its menu, served with onions and gravy, showing that the patty-style meat had entered mainstream American dining decades before the bun sandwich.
- 1904 – The hamburger gained national recognition at the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair when the New York Tribune referred to the hamburger as “the innovation of a food vendor on the pike”.
- 1921 – White Castle is the oldest burger chain in America. It started in 1921 by Walter A. Anderson and E.W. Ingram, who sold their burgers for 5 cents apiece.
- 1939 – According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the term “hamburger” was first abbreviated as “burger” in 1939.
- 1940 – The first McDonald’s restaurant opens in San Bernardino, California
- 1948 – In San Bernardino, California, Richard and Maurice McDonald introduced the “Speedee Service System,” focusing on hamburgers, fries, and shakes, and pioneering the production model that shapes modern fast-food burger chains.
- 2008 – Burger King released a meat-scented cologne called “Flame.”
- 2011 – Beyond Meat was founded to create plant-based patties that closely mimic beef, marking a new era in hamburger history as meatless burgers gain traction in supermarkets and fast-food outlets.
- 2017 – The world’s largest hamburger was 2,566 lb – 9 oz and was achieved in Pilsting, Germany, on 9 July 2017.
- 2019 – In partnership with Impossible Foods, Burger King begins serving the Impossible Burger, made entirely from plants, at locations worldwide.
- The term hamburger originally derives from Hamburg, Germany‘s second-largest city. In German, Burg means “castle”, “fortified settlement,” or “fortified refuge,” and is a widespread component of place names.
- The exact origin of the hamburger may never be known with any certainty.
- The Library of Congress credits Louis Lassen, a Danish immigrant and owner of Louis’ Lunch in New Haven, Connecticut, as the creator of the hamburger as we know it.
- New Haven’s Louis Lunch only serves onions, tomatoes, and cheese spread as a condiment – maintaining a ban on ketchup, mustard, and mayonnaise!
- On average, Americans eat three hamburgers a week. That’s a national total of nearly 50 billion burgers per year.
- If all the hamburgers eaten by Americans in a year were arranged in a straight line, it would circle our Earth 32 times or more!
- McDonald’s Corporation is the world’s largest chain of hamburger fast food restaurants, serving around 68 million customers daily in 119 countries.
- The Hamburger Hall of Fame is located in Seymour, Wisconsin.
- The Economist has an indicator of the purchasing power of a country measured in how many Big Macs could be bought in that country with $50 – The Big Mac Index.
- The Big Mac had two previous names: “aristocrat” and “blue ribbon burger”, both of which failed in the marketplace.
- During WWI, the US Gov’t tried to rename hamburgers as ‘liberty sandwiches.’
- Hamburgers, along with cheeseburgers, account for 71% of beef served in commercial hotels in the US.
- McDonald’s sells 75 or more burgers every second. That’s 6.5 million burgers worldwide, of which 5.4 million are sold in the US.
- Hamburger (ground beef patty) is the most popular food for the grill, followed by steak and chicken.
- More than seven out of ten burgers (73%, or 9.6 billion) consumed in the U.S. were prepared and purchased outside the home.
- 49 cents – the price at which the McDonald’s Big Mac was introduced.
- 40 billion – the estimated number of hamburgers consumed by Americans in a year.
- $15,000 – the number of dollars offered by PETA once to the town of Hamburg, New York, to change their name to ‘Veggieburg.’
- 4 – the average number of hamburgers eaten by every American in a week.
- 1 nickel – the price at which White Castle’s first burger was sold.
- 60% – the percentage of all sandwiches sold in the world that are hamburgers.
- 2,014 pounds – the weight of the world’s biggest burger, at Black Bear Resort Casino in Minnesota.
- 10 feet – the diameter of the world’s biggest burger.
- 75 – the number of McDonald’s Big Macs sold every minute.
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