Hamburger
The hamburger as ground meat can be traced back to the time when the Mongols (c. 1209) carried flat patties of lamb or mutton as a food source. The saddle would tenderize the meat and the meat would be eaten raw. It gave the Mongols the ability to carry food, and eat it all without dismounting from the horse. When the Mongols invaded Moscow, the hamburger was also brought and in turn was adopted as a cruisine named "steak tartare" after the invading Mongols (who were also known as the Tatars). Later the German port of Hamburg had ships that visited a Russian port and thus brought with it the new "tartare steak" as they would later call it. Ships from Hamburg, Germany coincidently shipped to New York also and brought by now was known as the Hamburg steak. It should also be noted that ancient Egyptians also ate ground meat.
In the Middle Ages, Hamburg was an important center of trade between Arab and European merchants. The theory is that Arab traders introduced Kibbeh, which is ground lamb mixed with spices, often eaten raw. The locals then adapted the dish by replacing the lamb with pork and/or beef, and more significantly, by cooking it to make a fillet of ground meat, i.e., a "Hamburg Steak" or "Hamburger" as it eventually came to be known, and from this they made a new and unique kind of Rundstück warm that came to be strongly associated with the city.
There is still a German tradition of making ground beef sandwiches, thought to descend from the original "Hamburg Rundstück," and which tend to be elongated like an American sub sandwich, and feature very different condiments than the typical modern hamburger. These are often referred to as "German hamburgers" outside of Germany, and are served in many German-food restaurants.
Within Germany, the specific connection between the food and the city of Hamburg became lost as the sandwich spread throughout the country and became a somewhat common dish, while in other countries the historical term "Hamburger" remained in popular usage to describe ground meat rolls and sandwiches. In modern times, the term hamburger may refer to the meat patty used to make the sandwich or to the sandwich itself.
- Hamburger" / Ground Meat Balti
- Down Home Grilled Hamburgers
- Easy Hamburger Quiche
- Filled Hamburgers
- Greek Hamburgers
- Grilled Hamburger Steak
- Hacienda Hamburger
- Hamburger Bean Dip
- Hamburger Buns
- Hamburger Cabbage Rolls
- Hamburger Cheese Dip
- Hamburger Chilaquiles
- Hamburger Creole
- Hamburger Deluxe
- Hamburger Mix
- Hamburger Parmesan
- Hamburger Pie
- Hamburger Pizza
- Hamburger Steak
- Hamburgers Diane
- Hamburgers for Grill
- Hamburgers with Chili
- Hamburgers with Gorgonzola Cheese
- Hong Kong Hamburger
- Jamaican Hamburgers