Australia Got Me Hella Confused With These Posts 🤣🎉
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- Опубліковано 16 чер 2024
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It's a burger because it's on a bun. A sandwich is made with sliced bread.
And it’s a burger bun.
exactly 😆
🇦🇺🇺🇸⚡
So I guess a Cuban sandwich isn't a sandwich then lol?
Anyway there is no right or wrong answer here. Calling it a chicken burger is totally valid because it is clearly a burger just with the ground meat patty replaced with a piece of chicken. But choosing to define a burger by the ground patty instead of by the bun is just as valid.
Same in England
If its on a burger bun its a burger. If its on sliced bread its a sandwich.
Yes. On a slice of sandwich bread. Just like a "bin chicken sandwich".
It's a burger not a sandwich because other wise it's a cheese sandwich not a cheeseburger. CHECKMATE YANKS!
This is absolutely how we think about burgers and sandwiches
@@EmbraceThePing This where the Yanks toss the board in the air.
Just like steak, if it's between bread it's a steak sandwich, if it's in a burger bun it's a steak burger
Calling it a chicken sandwich just about gave me an aneurism 😂. That boggles my mind! Anything with a bun is never a sandwich in Australia.
Or in most places on the planet. But you can always trust Americans to butcher the English language.
Same in Germany
Same here in the UK.
Same here on the other bit of Australia.
or anywhere else besides america
It’s a chicken BURGER ! A sandwich is on bread …. Simple.
yes
A bun is bread.
@@Angry_Squirrel555 a bun is not sandwich bread a sandwich is 2 flat slices of bread
@@Angry_Squirrel555 read ALL the comments below…a bun is different from a SANDWICH. …..A sandwich is two SLICES of bread
The distinction is the style of bread. Sliced = sandwich. Bun = burger, bun or roll.
A slice of steak between two halves of a burger bun is a steak burger.
A slice of steak between two slices of bread is a steak sandwich.
A slice of beef between a bread roll with gravy is a beef and gravy roll lol
Based and burgerpilled
@@lillibitjohnson7293 Damn now I'm hungry,
What about slice of bread between two steaks?
100%
Even in the UK, where we confuse Americans with pudding, if you asked for a chicken burger, that's what you get; if you asked for a chicken sandwich you'd get chicken between slices of bread.
Good to have you a back up.
That's a burger in Europe, too..because the buns. Sandwich would have sliced bread.
Americans also call DEMENTIA patients
"Mr President"😂😂😂
If you order a sandwich in Belgium you might get something completely different. We have specific words for sandwiches with different kinds of bread. Boterham, broodje, sandwich, pistolet, piccolo, etc...
@@getreal4371 They did, until 2020
@@timjohnun4297 with Trump up by 7 points across the polls, and leading in 6 out of 7 battle ground states. Also no court cases will be resolved before election. By your logic it may happen again.
@@getreal4371😂😂😂😂 lmao
In Australia, ask for a chicken sandwich, you'll get sliced bread and some cold chicken. Ask for a chicken burger, bun cooked chicken etc
Don't ask for a chicken sandwich in Australia, you will be disappointed, unless you hate buns. A sandwich by definition is meat between 2 slices of bread. Created by Lord Sandwich in England. That is how the name came about.
America, you are the only ones who call burgers sandwiches and scones biscuits.
They are weirdos.
And mars bars are milky ways there too lol
@@peterhoz but milky ways are completely different.
I have to say, if a scone is on your plate it's a scone. However, if it's not on your plate it's scon!😊
scones and gravy????? sounds gross
In NZ it's a chicken burger because it's hot and in a bun. Sandwiches are two slices of bread with filling. We also have fish burgers, vege burgers, bacon burgers, etc.
And venison. And egg. And... and...
We Kiwi's have so many burger options. My favourite place (a bit more than a hole in the wall, owned and run by a great Greek guy) closed down some years ago. Did the most outstanding burgers.
anything that's in burger buns are called 'Burgers' in Australia and most other countries, a sandwich is 2 slices of bread with whatever filling. America seems to be the only country that calls burgers "sandwiches"
Exactly 💯
Everything' with buns is a "burger" here in Aus 😂🎉😅. A sandwich is two slices of bread with whatever filling. As mentioned below, if cold meats or salad, it's a bread roll, salad roll... Cheers
I was just going to post the same thing.
@@happyheather7428 Me too. Ay.
Except something with cold sliced meat and salad would be a ham salad bun or roll
A “burger” is a ground patty that is grilled and put on a bun her in America. There is such a thing as chicken burger patties, and turkey as well. A whole piece of meat on a bun is still a sandwich though.
True! @@beyondbackwater4933
People calling anything served in a bun a sandwich gives me an aneurism...
people calling everything in buns a burger gives me an aneurysm
bun does not = automatic burger, the minced meat is what = a burger
@@blakett88you're a typical Yank aren't you 🤦♂️
🍔🍔🍔✔️✔️✔️
Dictionary Definitions from Oxford Languages.
Burger:
noun
a dish consisting of a flat round cake of minced beef, or sometimes another savoury ingredient, that is fried or grilled and served in a split bun or roll with various condiments and toppings.
🥪🥪🥪✖️✖️✖️
Dictionary Definitions from Oxford Languages
Sandwich:
noun
an item of food consisting of two pieces of bread with a filling between them, eaten as a light meal.
"a ham sandwich".
But you'll tell us the Oxford dictionary is wrong won't you.
Americans made the English language up didn't they!?..not the ENGLISH folk 😐😑🤦♂️
@@blakett88 only in America, and maybe 2 other countries. In literally the rest of the world, it's the bread/bun that defines it as a burger or a sandwich
In Australia and New Zealand that is 100% a chicken BURGER, because it's between two burger buns. A sandwich doesn't use buns, a sandwich is a filling between two SLICES of BREAD. The bun is the identifier, not the protein. We also have fish burgers. I'm sure it's only Americans that call burgers, sandwiches. Even KFC's burger menu is a BURGER menu.
I'm pretty sure it's illegal to drive while wearing headphones in NZ.
Illegal in most of Oz too mate, I reckon. 🇦🇺👍
chicken burger. chicken sandwich. chicken roll.
all have chicken inside, but you will get a distinctly different thing when ordering these in Australia.
And a chicken wrap. They are all different.
The jury has given its verdict , it's a burger😂😂😂😂😂
Hamburger means ground meat pattie that chicken sandwich did not look ground to me it has nothing to do with the bread 😅
@@drun420s4 lol not in my world, or 90% of the world for that matter 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@aussiebornandbredmost of them have never left the country. They know nothing 😂😂
@@aussiebornandbred USA only makes 4.23% of the world population actually
I don't think Americans can argue, they put marshmallows in salads and casseroles! In any event, on Wiki, it says a beef pattie or other savoury meat - like chicken!
It's called a something burger, fish burger and chicken burger, etc.
Burger buns plus filling equals Burger.
Simple as that.
A sandwich is made from sliced bread
Lord Humungus has spoken... 🎉👍🏼
says who? everyone keeps saying that but where are the official rules on wtf a burger and sandwich is?
oh we are all just making things up because it's what we're used to right?
@@blakett88 It's named after John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich. The story goes that he would order his valet to bring him salt beef between two pieces of toasted bread. This was easier for him to eat when he was busy gambling in public houses. So it's an English thing. I don't know that anyone seriously thinks he was the first person to do this, but he was famous and influential, so his name got associated with it. And the Germans use the word Hamburger (named after Hamburg, Germany) the same way as most of the world does, not like the US. Just accept that it is the US, and maybe some places/people influenced by the US, that are out of step on this issue.
Burgers are on buns. Sandwiches are in sliced bread. The contents don't change the categorisation. It's a burger lol
They have been called hamburger and sandwich long before sliced bread and burger buns were invented so……..
@@macdac9861 Buns and sliced bread are older. Burger buns were invented after burgers, but buns already existed. And people sliced their own bread long before factories were capable of slicing it during/after production and it's basically as old as bread itself.
In Australia if it comes on a burger bun its a burger, when I hear Americans calling burgers sandwiches it does get under my skin a little lol.
If it has a burger bun its a burger 🍔 , square flat bread is a sandwich.
🤣👍
In Australia we don't just have hamburgers and cheeseburgers, we have bacon burgers, bacon and egg burgers, steak burgers and chicken burgers
Only have hamburgers and cheeseburgers at Hungry Jacks and McDonald's
@@LeishaAussiechick73 Don't get out much do you,all sorts of burgers at most fish and chips shops and many cafes
A sandwich is anything between two slices of bread, a burger is anything between a bun. Is really simple.
So is a hotdog a sandwich or a burger?
@@Bioshynit’s a hot dog
@@Bioshyn A hotdog is a hotdog if it's in a hotdog bun, if it's inbetween two slices of bread then it's a sandwich but never a burger. It's not hard.
@@farmsimaussie1992 and if it's in a burger bun?
@@Bioshyna bender 😂
It’s a burger bun with chicken.
It’s a chicken burger.
🍻🍻🇦🇺
First word is the filling, second word is the covering or style. You do it for lamb kebab, chicken taco, even fish fingers. Why can't you be consistent murica? 🤣🤣😂😂
Why does a hamburger have beef instead of ham in it?
Yes. By their logic, they'd have to call minced beef in a taco a Taco Burger or Burger Taco, But they Don't. They really makeup their own language
Question: What would Americans call two slices of bread with a filling of salad? A salad sandwich? And two slices of bread with a filling of chicken? A chicken sandwich?
I don't know, a they call it egg salad and chicken salad, and there's no salad in it either😂
Ireland here.
It's a Chicken Burger / a Breast in a Bun
A Chicken Sandwich is Chicken between two slices of bread from a loaf, as apposed to two burger buns.
If you can have a Ham Burger without Ham , why can't you have a Chicken Burger without Ham ??
Hamburgers have nothing to do with ham. Name comes from the city of Hamburg in Germany.
The innovation of the hamburger was not the bun, which have existed in various forms for centuries before the invention of the hamburger, but rather the addition of a ground beef patty to that bun.
Is a bun without a ground meat patty still a burger? Well to us in Australia it is, while to the US it is not. But there is no definitively right or wrong answer here as many of the comments in this video seem to think. It just is what it is.
@@goaway9977 Yeah but it's a minced meat patty not a ground beef patty.
@@goaway9977exactly!
@@vtbn53minced beef burger, not patty.
For that statement to actually follow logically, you’d have to say 'without chicken'.
@IWrocker, as others have stated, that is a chicken burger. In Australia, a burger is always served with buns, a sandwich is always served with bread. Think about how can one call a hamburger a hamburger when it is made with beef? Ham is from pigs, beef is from cows. Wouldnt it be called a beefburger if the filling was beef, and hamburger when the filling is ham? Thus it's a chickenburger when the filling is chicken. LOL.
Gold reply
Hamburger has nothing to do with ham. It's named after the city of Hamburg in Germany. It's always been a beef patty since its inception.
@@goaway9977this is a chicken BURGER, not a chicken hamburger.
@noone6037 Okay what's a hamburger then?
@@goaway9977Hamburger is specifically a burger patty made from beef on a burger bun
I'm originally from Scotland now living in Australia, that is a chicken burger in both countries. A sandwich is between 2 slices of bread, google The Earl of Sandwich.
It's a burger everywhere else in the world.
Look up what the Earl of Sandwich used to make a sandwich. It wasn’t a hamburger bun ffs.
I'm from the UK and I'd definitely call that a chicken burger, as many, many others have said, a chicken sandwich is between 2 slices of bread
"Kong Foo Sing" is a song by Australian rock band Regurgitator. The song was released in April 1996 using the same artwork for the CD / Cassette single cover as the cookies.
Listen to it last Saturday....
They just put out a new album in April.... it's excellent
Thanks heaps for that mate... I was sure I knew those words (Kong Foo Sing) from somewhere, but I would have gone nuts trying to figure it out! 👍👍👍👍🍺🍺🇦🇺
In a country so politically divided at the moment, you can be happy you have one thing in common. All 333m of you are wrong about chicken burgers.
minced meat = burger, a bun does not automatically = a burger, you're wrong
@@blakett88 If you don't like what the rest of the world thinks, maybe you should go to war with them. Oh wait, you are.
@@blakett88 the original video is from australia where it is correctly referred to as a chicken burger. You can call it what you like in USA but that doesn't change what it is called here. We also have roo and croc burgers here, are you going to call them roo and croc sandwiches in USA 😀
Aussie 90s kid here. I have no fucking idea what those fortune cookies are about.
here in germany we also call this a chicken burger... the definition is within the bread thats used to make it... hamburger bun so naturally a burger, slices of sandwich toast then obviously a sandwich... pretty logical if you ask me!
How can something in a burger bun be a sandwich?
Probably with the same logic as why people drive on the wrong side of the road. 😂
This is the same in the entire world outside the usa. A burger is a patty of meat in a bun. Like beef burger, or maybe pork burger, or if youre at a market or something you might have a kangaroo burger, an ostrich burger and of course a chicken burger. A sandwhich is from the uk and is usually cold and made with 2 pieces of sliced bread. If you put a beef patty between 2 slices of bread that would be a sin and not a burger haha. Btw ive been driving around ireland for 12 years with earphones in now, never been in an accident despite our tiny narrow windy roads. I even did a delivery job for 2 years, you just get used to it.
Calling that a sandwich gives me an aneurysm
The whole world burger.. americans : sAnDwIcH
Wait until America hears people butter their bread in a (actual) sandwich 😁
Shit between two slices of bread is a sandwich. Shit between two halves of bun is shit burger. This discussion is shit.
And you taking part in it is…? (Said with gentle humour)
just because you say something with confidence doesn't make it so
where are these official rules that everyone seems to feel so strongly about?
did you know that burger comes from the hamBURG steak which is minced meat, the bun makes no difference in whether something is called a burger or not
@@blakett88 …and just because you disagree with something doesn’t make it less true.
What you do in your own country is your call. Not anyone else’s. The video was from and about Australia. Australians (and people in many other countries) call it a chicken burger. Ian was not saying "In America, we call it a sandwich", he said "It’s not a burger, it’s a sandwich," negating our right to decide names in our country. So we are saying, "It’s about Australia, and in Australia it’s a chicken burger".
Yes, hamburgers started in Germany, and they sell Bavarian Chicken Burgers there.
No rules, just what we do and say in our own country. As Americans do with the name aluminium. They spell aluminium as aluminum, different to every other country in the world. It’s scientifically incorrect, because the suffix for a metal is -ium, as it is with 90 of the 118 elements. But we say to them "You do you, and we'll do us." And Americans continue with imperial measurements, along with only two other (tiny) countries in the world, but that’s also their thing.
Damn straight. But let’s not confuse them with a Sanger, snag or banger.
@@Bellas1717 Jesus Christ what a rant, none of what you said had much of anything to do with what I said, also Aluminum and aluminium were used interchangeablly by the Americans and British (it was a British man who created the word "aluminum" first btw) until both countries decided to just stick with one. The whole aluminum aluminium debate falls apart the exact same way soccer and football debate does, another case of the Brits named it first then changed later.
I guess we could talk about some more non-sequiturs that you're wrong about if you want...
So KFC doesn't have ANY burgers!?!?!😱 Burger buns make a burger! Lol😜 💚🇦🇺💛
What do Americans order when they want a REAL chicken sandwich? You know, cold chicken in between two slices of bread?
MacDonalds in Denmark also call this a chicken burger. It`s an American company no one is forcing them to rename stuff. You just don`t make sandwich's with Burger buns. Not sure anyone other the McD even make chicken burgers, they just make chicken sandwich's with sandwich bread. Then there is subway using flutes/baguettes like a the French.
Well here in North America we call that a chicken sandwich end of story
@@drun420s4 and that story is a work of fiction
@@drun420s4 Yes but the original video is from Australia so it's correctly called a chicken burger here. It's just IWRocker who's confused. (and all other Seps apparently 😀) Is a peanut butter and jelly sandwich in USA served on a bun??? How do you make the distinction between a bun or sliced bread if they’re both called sandwiches???
Chicken burger hamburger the same here in Australia 🇦🇺
That is a chicken burger. If it's got two hamburger buns with something slapped in between it, we call that a burger. If you come here and ask for a chicken sandwich expecting to get that you will be disappointed. A sandwich is two regular slices of bread with something put on between it.
The Earl of Sandwich invented the sandwich. He wanted to be able to eat while playing cards so he ordered sliced beef between SLICES OF BREAD so he could eat one handed. So it is the sort of bread, sliced or bun, which determines whether it is a sandwich or a burger, not the filling.
A burger is made with round/square buns, a sandwich is made with sliced bread from a loaf and hotdogs are made with those long buns (subway actually sells hotdogs not sandwiches). 🤣🤣
Disagree about subway at least in the UK subway use baguettes which is a small version of French bread not got dog rolls
Hot not got lol
Bun = burger
Bread= sandwich.
It's that simple!!
Burgers have buns sandwich has slices of bread and hotdogs have hotdog buns.
Wraps are self explanatory .
The Southern Koala is big and furry due to the cold and the northern is a bit smaller and less furry due to the heat.
There is no difference in genetics .
Hence why it is a SUB species and not a second species
@@WarLordArtos People don't even realize that they themselves are a sub species just like the Koala .
This Aurora Australis was unusual in that it stretched as far north as New South Wales and Western Australia. That only occurs once about every 20 years. Living in southern Victoria we get to see it far more frequently.
It was also seen in Qld.
@@shoresaresandy yes, we saw it north of brisbane.
Sandwiches are made using sliced bread, Burgers are made using Burger Buns
Ian, let me explain to you how this hamburger thing works in Australia. A sandwich consists of two slices of bread with any filling of your choice., hot or cold. They can be served fresh or toasted. A hamburger consists of a soft bread roll, split in half and filled with the hot meat of your choice plus salad and condiments. It can also be filled with vegetarian options such as a vegie patty still warm, and whatever else you like. Now, a crusty bread roll with your choice of fillings is simply called a bread roll or a roll named after the filling you choose, so a salad roll is a crusty bread roll filled with salad items, but you don’t have to use crusty bread, you can use soft bread rolls as well if you like. Some rolls are round and some are a longer shape, like a small baguette. You can have a ham and salad roll, or a chicken and salad roll, or a tuna salad roll, or whatever else you fancy. So we do the same to burger buns and call them burgers named after their main filling. Therefore a chicken burger is a burger bun with a hot piece of chicken or crumbed chicken inside it and whatever else you want to put with it, lettuce and mayo, or cheese and tomato, or avocado and Vegemite. The possibilities are endless. Aussies like to do things our own way, after all, why restrict ourselves to just one idea when we can come up with hundreds! 😃😜😋😋😋🇦🇺
My Canadian wife has been here in Oz for five years and she now calls this a chicken burger.
A sandwich is something made with SLICED BREAD.
Bun=burger, it's like that EVERYWHERE except for USA.
Funny that in Pompeii there is a wall in what we would call a fast food outlet that describes a chopped meat patty between two halves of a bun. Sort of sounds familiar. Should be called a "Pompeii burger"🍔
Bread=sandwich
Bun=burger
That's how it is!
Exactly 💯
If that's a chicken sandwich, how do you ask for a chicken sandwich in sliced bread?
That's a burger period, now I'm off to maccas to get a minced beef sandwich.
Saturday here in Sebastopol Victoria a coolish 16C 61F . at the moment 1.45pm 14C 57F .And it is a burger ,sandwich is bread .
I'm near Daylesford, it's barely reached 10c here today. It's 8c now and will be 1c middle of the night. Winter has come way too early 😢
@@lmaree200886 14c and sunny here in Horsham
@darrengray2309 It's sunny here too but boy it's chilly outside!
So, regarding Chicken Burger or Chicken Sandwich that was a Chicken Burger, so you mentioned the Chick fill-A calling it a Chicken Sandwich well not sure if we have Chick fill-A in Australia but we do have KFC and they have Chicken Burgers so for example I could go and order a Zinger Burger or a Ultimate Burger not a Zinger Sandwich or a Ultimate Sandwich.
A Chicken sandwich here in Australia is between two pieces of bread not a bun as pictured alternatively you can have a toasted sandwich or "Toastie" which is two buttered pieces of bread and the filling (in this case the chicken) and normally some cheese and you do that in a toasted sandwich maker because, well, it's what toasted sandwich makers do. It's their job and they do it.
Wait. If you put a patty between two slices of bread, you call it a burger? Wtf? 😂
It's litterally not a sandwich by definition of what a sandwich actually is.
If you didn't know it was chicken wtf does it look like? A BURGER. 🤦♂️🇦🇺
What makes a chicken burger a burger?
A bun with a cooked chicken breast as filling would generally be called a chicken sandwich in the U.S., but in the UK and other Commonwealth or former colonial countries, such a dish is not generally considered a sandwich, and would generally be called a chicken burger instead, same old thing Americans think they are right and invented every thing. Peace out.
Although the exact origin and invention of the burger is disputed, it's development and popularisation is definitively American.
Every culture gets a little mad when they see their culinary dishes misinterpreted or butchered in other countries. It's petty but it's just human nature. And it's not a trait exclusive to Americans that's for sure.
@@goaway9977the invention of the sandwich isn't.
There were no buns involved 😉
Kong Foo Sing = Confusing
Regurgitator....
The kong foo sing
Brilliant song
💯 a chicken burger, it’s in a burger bun. Sandwich is sliced bread. Chicken roll would be different again as well as a chicken baguette. 😉
In New Zealand it's a Chicken Burger, sandwich is between sliced bread.
Only a chicken sandwich in America . Euro , uk and Aus , it’s a burger
Exactly 💯
Fortune cookies used to only be served in Chinese restaurants but in the 90s they were available at the supermarket too.
Took my American wife a lot of years to understand this. American's call ground beef (minced beef) hamburger, but if it's used in Lasagna, you don't call that a hamburger, do you? Also, a hamburger suggests the use of ham, but you use beef and call it a hamburger. So the term hamburger is a very loose term to begin with. So, anything hot, made on round buns, is a burger, in Australia, regardless of what meat you use. Calling it a sandwich is just wrong. We do have what is called a steak sandwich, in Australia, it's made with an actual slab of steak, with all the fillings you'd have on a burger.
The 🐨 with the fluffy ears can hear you coming down the bush trails... It's definitely a drop bear. 🤔😬😂
What's so hard to understand ? Bun ? BURGER. Sliced bread ? SANDWICH. Hot dog ? ROLL. Difficult ? Only for Americans it seems.
Burger bun "burger" loafed bread "sandwich"
If you look up on line what is called a burger it clearly states that it is served on a bun with other condiments and salad or cheese or bacon. Therefore it is definitely a burger. If you ask for a sandwich in Australia or in other parts of the world it will be served on sliced bread.
A burger is a bun with a grilled or fried insert plus various extras like cheese, salad and sauce. There are hamburgers, beef burgers, chicken burgers, fish burgers [my favorite], pulled pork burgers, brekkie burgers, veggie burgers.....
Aussies terms are based on the bread used. As in a burger bun or regular sliced bread. Here we have both steak burgers and steak sandwiches :)
Iwrocker you spoke about this fairly and it's ok for you on very rare occasions to be WRONG. 😂
Anything between a burger bun is a burger.
This is certainly a high koala-ty video 😂
If it's a patty or fillet of meat between two burger buns, it's a burger
A chicken sandwich in Australia implies some form of cold chicken in sliced bread, maybe toasted. Other forms of bread will be specified e.g. roll, focaccia, Turkish, baguette. If you order a chicken sandwich expecting something like the photo you will be disappointed. Any type of freshly cooked hot item in a warmed bun with salad, sauce etc is called a burger. Possible fillings include meat patties, fried or grilled chicken, pulled pork, a big mushroom, fish or grilled halloumi.
Same in Sweden as in Australia. If it has a burger bun it is a burger. A sandwich has sliced bread.
I think it's simply a historical thing. When burgers first made it out of the USA and all over the world, the world adopted the term of a "burger", "hamburger" and "cheeseburger" quickly. The chicken variants of these sandwiches came later to these fast food joints. How a burger _looked_ was kind of iconic, and putting fish or chicken between the burger buns doesn't change the fact that we, around the world, call this _form_ of sandwich a burger. We also have plenty of chicken sandwiches, of course, which use other types of bread. Basically: Anything from Subway, with its standard form of bread, will be a sandwich regardless of the content, and anything from McD, with its standard form of bread, will be a burger. It makes a lot of sense. Unless, of course, you're used to the American way and have grown up with it. I must say, I've never thought it _wrong_ that Americans call it a chicken sandwich, I just thought "it's one of those differences, they also have to put the word 'eye' before 'glasses' etc.
No we mean burger. if it's a burger bun it's a burger. if it uses sliced sandwich bread it's a sandwich.
Simple.
Then we don't get stupid debates like "is a taco a sandwich" or "is a hot dog a sandwich".
If it's in sandwich bread it's a sandwich. If it's in a taco shell it's a taco. If it's in a burger bun it's a burger. Simple.
What about a Banh Mi?
@@Krenisphia a Banh Mi is in a long roll, so gets referred to as a "Vietnamese Pork Roll" if you don't use the correct name. Once again the form of bread is the decider.
In Belgium we would call that a burger too, altough a sandwich over here is something different altogether. We never call stuff between 2 slices of Bread a sandwich. It's a specific type of hearthy brioche bread that you use to eat anything you would eat on a slice of Bread as well.
In Sweden that is definitely a Chicken Burger. And i know for a fact its the same in Norway, Denmark, Finland and Germany. I think America is the only place who would call that a sandwich haha. Cheers Ian !
On behalf of Finland, you're right. And I'm sure it's like this in all of Europe. I wonder what they call a two slices of bread with chicken filling then?
If you can have a cheese burger, you can have a chicken burger !!!!
Well I'm Australian so I think chicken burger is perfectly acceptable but you're kinda arguing against yourself here.
If a cheese burger = a ground beef patty with cheese then by that logic a chicken burger would be a ground beef patty plus a piece of chicken.
Or alternatively is a [word] burger means that the [word] denotes the main filling between the bun like it does in chicken burger, then a cheese burger would mean some kind of cheese patty between a bun with no meat.
@@goaway9977a hamburger doesn't even have ham on it..
@@rogerk6180 Cause it's named after the city of Hamburg.
I as an Aussie was so confused when I went to the US for the first time. The home of burgers I always thought, and you called them sandwiches?? That hurt my brain!! Weird!
No one in Australia would call that a sandwich and if you ordered a chicken sandwich in Australia you would definitely NOT get this. Is this just another American thing I wonder 🤔
Yep, named by Chick-Fil-A
Hamburger, fish burger, chicken burger all on buns. Sandwiches on Sandwich Bread. 🇦🇺
Ask yourself how a hamburger is made of beef not pork. Because Ham is pork, right?
Hamburger is named from the German City of Hamburg, not from the type of meat used.
I'm Australian so I use the term chicken burger but it should be obvious from the way that 'burger' by itself implies, even to us Aussies, that it is a beef patty in a bun, means that the word burger is not derived from just the bun but rather the whole dish, bun and beef patty combined.
The fact that the US stuck to a more traditional use of the term while other English speaking countries decided to use the term more broadly just is what it is.
@@goaway9977 Why would it be beef? Traditionally German people tended to eat a lot more pork than beef.
Actually, most cultures did. That's because you can grow a lot more pork for less land and less effort than beef.
@AndyViant Sure it could be a ground pork patty instead of beef. That's not really the relevant point though. The point I'm making is just that a burger is traditionally a ground meat patty which is why we don't need to distinguish it by calling it a beef burger even here in Australia.
The term burger was defined early in its existence as a ground meat patty in a bun, and not simply just a bun filled with anything. Definitions evolve over time and evolve differently in different geographical regions, which is why both chicken burger and chicken sandwich are equally valid.
@@goaway9977 The first official sandwich was roast beef between two pieces of bread. So does that make it a burger rather than a sandwich, because it had meat in it?
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Sorry, Iqan. It's a burger.- In many English-speaking countries outside the United States, including the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, a piece of chicken breast on a bun is known as a chicken burger, which would generally not be considered a burger in the United States because the meat is whole, not ground; Americans would generally call it a chicken sandwich, but in Commonwealth English a sandwich typically requires sliced bread, and anything with a bun is usually considered a burger.
I think the confusion for Australians is the ground or minced meat component isn’t called hamburger here as it is in the US, it’s generally called a pattie. Also buns and rolls when made up into a sandwich here are literally called a bun or roll if you order one from a cafe, a sandwich, as others have said, will be made on bread slices. I’ve noticed here in Aus, MacDonalds don’t call their chicken sandwiches “burgers” or “sandwiches” it’ll be a Mac something. On a historical note, the Hamburger has its origins in Germany, a lot of Aussies I’ve spoken to mistakenly think the Ham in hamburger refers to meat, that’s why you often see hamburgers, the sandwich that is, referred to as a beef burger, to differentiate it from other meats offered in a bun.
Don't ever call it a chicken sandwich in front of Clayton! CHICKEN BUUUURRGER
Maaate.
Yeah Nah.
I was on the floor 1 minute in.🤣🤣
That's a hamburger, because it has ham.
That's a cheese burger.
Because it has cheese.
This is a chicken sandwich.
Because it has chicken?
Maybe a misconception 🤔But I'm pretty sure "hamburgers"
don't have ham in them,they have beef.
So now I'm really confused🤷
But at the end of the day.
You say
"Tomato"
I say
"Tomato".