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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Slugburger Festival  





3 See also  





4 References  





5 External links  














Slugburger






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Slugburger
A slugburger with onion rings
CourseMain
Place of originUnited States
Region or stateSoutheast
Created byJohn Weeks
Main ingredientsBeef or pork with an inexpensive meat extender such as soybeans

Aslugburger (originally Weeksburger) is a traditional Southern food found in the area of Northeast Mississippi, particularly Corinth, New Albany, Booneville, Iuka, Tishomingo, Burnsville, West Tennessee, and north Alabama, particularly Decatur, Hartselle, Athens, Moulton, and Cullman. Consisting of a patty made from a mixture of beef or pork and an inexpensive meat extender such as soybeans, it is deep fried in oil. It is typically served on a bun with mustard, pickles, onion, and in some places with a side of French fries or onion rings.

History

John Weeks brought his hamburger recipe from Chicago to Corinth in 1917. Weeks had local butchers grind his hamburger meat to specification, asking them to include potato flakes and flour. These small hamburgers were originally called Weeksburgers. Sometime before 1950, soy grits replaced the potato and flour and has remained the primary extender. According to town legend, the term "slugburger" comes from the slang term for a metal disk the size of a nickel that would work in vending machines.[1][2]

At one time, five of the Weeks brothers were selling Weeksburgers in the south end of Corinth. As well as running twelve other hamburger stands, one of the brothers ran stands out of old trolley cars after the Second World War, including one in Booneville.

Slugburger Festival

World Slugburger Eating Championship [3]
Year Winner Burgers Runner up
2012

Matt Stonie

30 ‡ Adrian Morgan (24.5)
2013 31 ‡ Joey Chestnut (30)
2014 43 ‡ Joey Chestnut (42)
2015 Joey Chestnut 33 Juan Rodriguez (23)
2016 41 Geoffrey Esper (32)
‡ World record set

Each year the citizens of Corinth as well as those who travel from miles around descend on the town to pay tribute to this local culinary specialty at the annual Slugburger Festival. The festival is held in downtown Corinth for three weekend evenings in July, and is run by Main Street Corinth. There is entertainment at Train Depot and a carnival by Trailhead Park, plus the World Slugburger Eating Championship.

TripAdvisor.com considers the festival one of the “wackiest” Summer events, along with The Great Texas Mosquito Festival, Michigan's Humongous Fungus festival and the Hollerin’ Contest.[4] As a part of the entertainment, the festival holds a singing contest, Slug Idol, featuring contestants from surrounding counties in Tennessee and Mississippi.

The Slugburger Festival was started in 1988. In 2012, the first World Slugburger Eating Championship was held at the Festival. The winners have come exclusively from Northern California, as professional Major League Eating eaters have dominated. Matt Stonie from San Jose, California won the first three, the last of which in 2014 he set the world record, with 43 slugburgers eaten in 10 minutes, beating Joey Chestnut, in a field of 11 competitors.

In 2015, Chestnut won, just days after Chestnut, the eight-time Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest winner was defeated in New York by Stonie, who did not compete in Mississippi. Chestnut ate 33 burgers. He repeated the feat with 41 in 2016, after he had reclaimed the Nathan's title days earlier.

See also

  • flag Mississippi
  • icon Food
  • References

  • ^ CrossRoads Access, Inc. Corinth History
  • ^ Clark, JB (July 14, 2013). "Stonie defends Slugburger Festival title in eating contest". Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal. Retrieved February 5, 2015.
  • ^ Allen, Nancy B. (July 6, 2012). "Slugburger Festival". Live at 9. WREG. Retrieved February 5, 2015.
  • External links


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Slugburger&oldid=1229148387"

    Categories: 
    Cuisine of the Southern United States
    Hamburgers (food)
    Mississippi cuisine
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    Articles with short description
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    This page was last edited on 15 June 2024, at 04:05 (UTC).

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