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  2. Ground beef - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_beef

    In many countries, food laws define specific categories of ground beef and what they can contain. For example, in the United States, beef fat may be added to hamburger but not to ground beef if the meat is ground and packaged at a USDA-inspected plant. [note 1] In the U.S., a maximum of 30% fat by weight is allowed in either hamburger or ground ...

  3. History of the hamburger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_hamburger

    Hamburger profile showing the typical ingredients: bread, vegetables, and ground meat. Open hamburger with cheese and fries served in an American diner. Originally just a ground beef patty, as it is still interpreted in multiple languages, [a] the first hamburger likely originated in Hamburg (), hence its name; [1] [2] however, evidence also suggests that the United States may have later been ...

  4. Ground meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_meat

    Ground meat in sausage making Ground beef in an industrial grinder. Ground meat, called mince or minced meat outside North America, is meat finely chopped by a meat grinder or a chopping knife. A common type of ground meat is ground beef, but many other types of meats are prepared in a similar fashion, including pork, veal, lamb, goat meat, and ...

  5. Hamburg steak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburg_steak

    This kind of fillet was beef ground by hand, lightly salted, often smoked, and usually served raw in a dish along with onions and bread crumbs. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The oldest document that refers to the Hamburg steak in English is a Delmonico's Restaurant menu from 1873 that offered customers an 11-cent plate of Hamburg steak that had been developed by ...

  6. Fried onion burger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fried_onion_burger

    Fried onion burger. A fried onion burger, also called an Oklahoma onion burger, is a regional burger style and specialty of Oklahoma cuisine.The dish was created in El Reno, Oklahoma, in the 1920s by a restaurateur searching for a way to stretch ground beef with a less expensive ingredient in order to cheaply feed striking railroad workers during the Great Railroad Strike of 1922.

  7. Meat industry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meat_industry

    Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 July 2019; Walsh, Margaret (1982). "From Pork Merchant to Meat Packer: The Midwestern Meat Industry in the Mid Nineteenth Century". Agricultural History. 56 (1): 127– 137. JSTOR 3742304. Warren, Wilson J. (1 January 2021). "The Meat Industry Goes Back to the Jungle". Current History.

  8. Salisbury steak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salisbury_steak

    The exception is if de-fatted beef or pork is used, where the limit is 12% combined. No more than 30% may be fat. Meat byproducts are not permitted; however, beef heart meat is allowed. Extender (bread crumbs, flour, oat flakes, etc.) content is limited to 12%, except isolated soy protein at 6.8% is considered equivalent to 12% of the others.

  9. Red Meat Republic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Meat_Republic

    Red Meat Republic: A Hoof-to-Table History of How Beef Changed America is a 2019 nonfiction agricultural history book written by Joshua Specht and published by Princeton University Press. It covers the history of beef production in the United States, along with cattle ranching , and how the increase and expansion of beef products have been ...