Saturday, January 16, 2010

JCW's - LEHI


Address: 3605 Thanksgiving Way, Lehi, UT 84043

What I ordered: a cheese burger with ketchup and mustard

Taste: amazing

Service: friendly and prompt

Price: good

Quality: clean and fries were perfect

Overall Experience: 5 out of 5

Special thanks to all my friends that came with me and helped with the review...

Send me a comment and let me know where we should go in two weeks.

JCW's is the Winner!!!


The votes are in and we are headed to JCW's in Lehi near Thanksgiving Point. My dad and I will get there at 6pm. Come have a burger from "The Burger Boys", watch some TV in HD, and help me with my review.

http://www.jcws.com/

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

The History of the Hamburger


Have you ever wondered who invented the hamburger? I have, and here is what I found.

"In April of 1995, the Dallas Morning News reported Oklahoma author says Tulsa beats out Texas as the birthplace of delicacy. Michael Wallis, author of "Route 66, The Mother Road", was quoted by the newspaper to say he had discovered Tulsa's place in culinary history. The discovery was made while researching the state’s tastiest hamburgers. What better place to start than the restaurant that has been voted Tulsa's best burger more often than any other restaurant since 1933…Weber’s Root Beer Stand. Mr. Wallis’ research revealed that Oscar Weber Bilby was the first person to serve a real hamburger. On July 4, 1891, ground beef was served on his wife’s homemade buns. The Fourth of July party took place on his farm, just west of present day Tulsa. Until then, ground beef had been served in Athens, Texas on simple slices of bread, known presently and then as a "patty melt". According to the Tulsa-based author, the bun is essential. Therefore, in 1995, Governor Frank Keating cited Athens, Texas' feat of ground beef between two slices of bread to be a minor accomplishment. The Governor's April 1995 Proclamation also cites the first true hamburger on the bun, as meticulous research shows, was created and consumed in Tulsa in 1891. The Governor's Proclamation cites April 13, 1995 as Tulsa as "The Real Birthplace of the Hamburger.""

Thanks Mr. Bilby!

Saturday, January 2, 2010

In and Out - American Fork


Address: 601 W. Main Street, American Fork, Utah

What I ordered: Double Hamburger - nothing but ketchup

Taste: fantastic

Service: they got my order wrong

Price: cheap

Quality: clean and the food was fresh

Overall Experience: 4 out of 5