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How to eat a hamburger: The official rules for summer’s official sandwich
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<blockquote data-quote="cheryl" data-source="post: 2327" data-attributes="member: 1"><p><a href="https://www.doverpost.com/lifestyle/20200702/how-to-eat-hamburger-official-rules-for-summers-official-sandwich" target="_blank"><strong>How to eat a hamburger: The official rules for summer’s official sandwich - Dover Post</strong></a></p><p></p><p>While fast food isn’t the hamburger’s only venue, it was engineered for life on the go. According to the official hamburger creation story as certified by the Library of Congress, the era began in 1900, when a customer rushed into Louis’ Lunch in New Haven, Connecticut. He needed some fast food he could grab and go, long before those terms had been coined. Louis Lassen, who’d opened the place five years earlier, served him a ground beef patty between two pieces of sliced bread, and the burger was born.</p><p></p><p>This hot, juicy, tender steak sandwich would find its way onto almost every restaurant menu in America, including some of the fanciest. But because the burger is at its best when eaten one-handed, it was the burger and not apple pie that built the drive-thru, just as Babe Ruth built Yankee Stadium. And the lifestyle that the drive-thru enabled, for better or worse, has become as American as ketchup.</p><p></p><p>Louis’ Lunch could have had the first-mover’s advantage in this growth industry, but opted for a simpler path. A sign on the wall announces, “This isn’t Burger King. You can’t have it your way.”</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cheryl, post: 2327, member: 1"] [URL='https://www.doverpost.com/lifestyle/20200702/how-to-eat-hamburger-official-rules-for-summers-official-sandwich'][B]How to eat a hamburger: The official rules for summer’s official sandwich - Dover Post[/B][/URL] While fast food isn’t the hamburger’s only venue, it was engineered for life on the go. According to the official hamburger creation story as certified by the Library of Congress, the era began in 1900, when a customer rushed into Louis’ Lunch in New Haven, Connecticut. He needed some fast food he could grab and go, long before those terms had been coined. Louis Lassen, who’d opened the place five years earlier, served him a ground beef patty between two pieces of sliced bread, and the burger was born. This hot, juicy, tender steak sandwich would find its way onto almost every restaurant menu in America, including some of the fanciest. But because the burger is at its best when eaten one-handed, it was the burger and not apple pie that built the drive-thru, just as Babe Ruth built Yankee Stadium. And the lifestyle that the drive-thru enabled, for better or worse, has become as American as ketchup. Louis’ Lunch could have had the first-mover’s advantage in this growth industry, but opted for a simpler path. A sign on the wall announces, “This isn’t Burger King. You can’t have it your way.” [/QUOTE]
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How to eat a hamburger: The official rules for summer’s official sandwich
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