The name probably comes from the city, either directly or indirectly. There was a ground beef patty served on an open face bun called Rundstuckwarm in Hamburg, but in other places it was called a Hamburg Sausage or Hamburg Steak. The double bun sandwich version started becoming popular in the US in the late 1800s/early 1900s
"Hamburger" comes from "Hamburg", but that comes from "hamma" + "burg" -- so the break hasn't shifted. And what's "a nother"? I've occasionally heard that used for comic effect, but never seriously.
Cool
So hamburgers are really from Habmburg; I thought similarity was a coincidence
The name probably comes from the city, either directly or indirectly. There was a ground beef patty served on an open face bun called Rundstuckwarm in Hamburg, but in other places it was called a Hamburg Sausage or Hamburg Steak. The double bun sandwich version started becoming popular in the US in the late 1800s/early 1900s
I always genuinely enjoy your videos !!! Super cool
Thanks! I’m glad you like them!
Do you member?
If not, try, re-membering it...
"Hamburger" comes from "Hamburg", but that comes from "hamma" + "burg" -- so the break hasn't shifted. And what's "a nother"? I've occasionally heard that used for comic effect, but never seriously.
“Nother” still isn’t a word.
And it isn’t going to be, because people who can’t spell don’t have the right to make it so.
Yes it is.
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/nother