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#1095275 added August 14, 2025 at 7:48am
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Burger? I Barely Know 'Er
The theme for this Atlas Obscura article is clearly not timely here in August, but there are good reasons to consider this essential information that's valuable year-round.

    6 Historical Burgers to Make for July 4th  Open in new Window.
Boozy fillings, peanut butter toppings, and other interesting recipes of yore.


Those reasons are:

1) There is no one time of year to eat burgers. It's not like it's eggnog, which is only acceptable in December.

2) Lots of people who see this on the internet are from places where July 4 isn't a special holiday; and

3) The holiday has become irrelevant in the US, as most of the country's founding principles have been shredded.

Now, the article itself is short, with links to the specific burger recipes. Consequently, I'll be brief, as well.

I am firmly anti-gimmick burger. A well-grilled patty on a soft bun is already a fine dish that needs little embellishment. So every time I see a new version with foie-gras filling or doughnut buns, I cringe.

Okay, I'm not entirely contrarian to what this author is saying, but, for starters, "doughnut buns" aren't something new and inspired; they're a long-standing tradition in my town, one that's even older than I am. Burgers on donuts were originally called, as I understand it, "grillswiths." As this is a college town, it's not surprising that the idea spread to other places, but it's not some sort of "new version."

For finishers, there's another long-standing tradition, this one pretty much global, that you take street food and/or subsistence food and, later, embellish it with variations that can be labeled "fancy" or "high-class," like the aforementioned foie gras, or caviar, or one place I vaguely remember that put gold flakes on their burgers just for the novelty of it (and probably for the 1000% markup opportunity).

But I will always hold a place in my heart for the slugburger. A Depression-era hack meant to stretch meager meat supplies, the recipe combines ground beef or pork with potato flour.

This will probably never work in the next Great Depression, as ground beef/pork has stopped being a cheap food.

From a Prohibition-era speakeasy that still slings bitters-filled patties to a roadside stand that’s carrying on a century-old tradition of steaming burgers, American history is filled with unusual burgers born of unusual times.

Like I said, burgers have slipped past our border controls and can be found in lots of different places. The article has links to six specifically American burgers, but who knows what burger variations you might find on the streets of some foreign and exotic land?

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