G Wiv wrote:Oklahoma Onion Burger for National Burger Day, big flavor payoff for a wee bit of effort. 80/20 ground chuck, onion sliced on a mandoline, rest is fairly self explanatory.
ronnie_suburban wrote:But here's the part that not self-explanatory (at least, not to me): where exactly does Oklahoma enter the picture?
if you should happen to drive to
El Reno, a small Oklahoma town
about 25 miles west of Oklahoma City, you’ll find an unusual
burger that's the object of much local
adoration. The fried onion burger ( or
FOB, to locals ) was born in the 1920s
out of Depression era necessity at the
Hamburger Inn out on Route 66
G Wiv wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:But here's the part that not self-explanatory (at least, not to me): where exactly does Oklahoma enter the picture?
I ate two in two minutes, they were great!
First we Feast, Alvin Cailan teams up with burger scholar George Motz
info at 5:07
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdvZC91YpMs
George Motz
"Grease is a condiment"
BadgerDave wrote:Here's a slightly similar take from Wisconsin on the onion burger:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUXqPiaO1lQ
BadgerDave wrote:Here's a slightly similar take from Wisconsin on the onion burger:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUXqPiaO1lQ
Binko wrote:BadgerDave wrote:Here's a slightly similar take from Wisconsin on the onion burger:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUXqPiaO1lQ
That looks right up my alley! Thanks. I know where one of my next food excursions is headed!
David Hammond wrote:In the video and elsewhere in this thread, reference was made to the Oklahoma Onion Burger being a product of the Depression. I find foods developed during periods of hardship (gravy bread, fry bread, etc.) to be fascinating, but these lush and delicious-looking OOBs seem not to bespeak hardship (though I can see how, in an earlier period, the onion could have been mixed into the beef to extend it). Doesn't the cheese itself make it all more "deluxe"?
Few days ago in Tupelo, Mississippi, I had a burger, also said to be the product of Depression era privation, that looks the part. It's called the Dough Burger, and it's mostly flour with some meat and beef fat worked into wheat flour.
This was not a delicious burger. It was, as you might expect, terribly dry, and although lettuce and onion helped a little, it could have used butter or a dab of mayo.
Further north in Mississippi, in Corinth, they make a similar burger with corn and/or soy meal. They call it the Slug Burger because it used to cost a slug (five cents).
David Hammond wrote:a burger, also said to be the product of Depression
David Hammond wrote:
G Wiv wrote:Onion burgers with the bride = dinner. #lowslowbbq #countmeafan #homecooking
Onion Burger, count me a Fan!