A hamburger (or burger) consists of a cooked ground meat patty, usually beef, placed in a sliced bun or between pieces of bread or toast.
Salisbury steak is made of chopped beef which is shaped to resemble a steak and usually served in brown sauce.
The Salisbury steak was invented by an American physician, Dr. J. H. Salisbury (1823-1905), and the term "Salisbury steak" was in use in the USA from 1897. It is popular in the United States, where it is traditionally served with gravy and mashed potatoes or noodles.
There are about 218 calories in one Salisbury steak with gravy.
There are about 218 calories in one Salisbury steak with gravy.
I thought it was World War 2 they were renamed "salisbury steaks" because the term "hamburgers" originally came from Germany, and Americans were trying their best to prevent any association with that country at the time.
There are 170 calories in one Hormel type Salisbury steak.
I'm guessing you were going for "Salisbury Steak". It's ground beef in a pattie, usually covered with mushroom beef gravy. If it sounds an awful lot like a hamburger, it's because it is.
The United States is credited for the first actual hamburger on a bun. It was first made in Tulsa in 1891. However, the Library of Congress recognizes the sales by Louis Lassen (1900) as the first. The term "hamburger" for a chopped-meat dish comes from Hamburg in Germany, where a 'hamburg steak' (late 1880s) was originally minced smoked beef. The similar dish 'Salisbury steak' is named for a US physician, Dr. J.H. Salisbury.
Salisbury steak
depends of the hamburger had bacon on it or not, if it did then the hamburger would win hands down, but if it didn't the steak would win.
Stephanie Cambria goes by Steph.
Hamburger comes from the Chinese, but you could just look in a dictionary Actually, the word Hamburger comes from Germany, It was originally called a "Hamburg steak" because in Germany there was a port called "Hamburg" and the staple of the town was a piece of pounded beef, eventually when it traveled elsewhere it was called a "Hamburger Steak" the adjective Hamburger meaning "Of hamburg" and eventually the laziness of human language dropped off the "steak" part and just left Hamburger.
salisbury
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