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Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Now That's a Hamburger!


Besting the paltry previous record of 185.8 pounds, Canadian chef Ted Reader created this insane 590 lb hamburger from 307 lbs of beef, 100 lbs of bread, 20 lbs of lettuce, and 150 lbs of condiments...

Ted Reader's Giant Hamburger

Canadian chef grills 268-kilo burger

By THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — A Canadian barbecue chef is trying to take a very big bite out of the record books by grilling what could be the world’s largest burger.

Ted Reader set a sizzling mark Thursday by creating a hamburger at Yonge-Dundas Square in downtown Toronto that tips the scales at 268 kilograms, or 590 pounds. If someone were to chow down the equivalent of the colossal creation in quarter-pound portions, he or she would have to devour 2,360 burgers.

If the mark stands, that would make mincemeat of the previous Guinness World Record of around 84 kilograms, or 185.8 pounds. However, Reader says they still have to wait for Guinness to give them the official nod that they’ve claimed the biggest burger crown, which he anticipates will take a couple of weeks.

Regardless of the official outcome, Reader expressed pride in the effort.

“Whether they say ‘yea’ or they say ‘nay’, I don’t care. We built it, now we’re going to serve it,” he says.

“We tried to do all the checks and balances and make sure we followed the rules. Let’s hope they go, ‘Yea.’

The award-winning chef used a specially designed grill with a built-in forklift mechanism designed to flip the oversized culinary creation.

Reader says it took six hours to cook the behemoth of a burger, starting off with a patty weighing 139 kilos. The grilled patty was then nestled in a 48-kilogram bun, dressed with lettuce, cheese, tomatoes, red onions, pickles and barbecue sauce.

“I’m amazed that we got it out of the grill and onto the bun,” Reader says. “That was the whole trickiness to it, but it’s held together, it’s edible, it’s delicious.”

An auction of the burger also netted money for a charitable cause, with $8,500 raised to benefit Camp Bucko, a camp program for children with burn injuries.


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