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Out of context: Reply #72921
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- dasohr2
Having a bit of a crisis... I just saw an edited, timelapsed burger assembly on one of Gordon Ramseys social medias.
Here is how I assemble a burger bottom to top.
Bun, mayo, patty, cheese on patty, lettuce, onion, tomatoe, mustard and catsup on bun, finito.
Ramsey builds it like this:
Bun, lettuce, onion, tomatoe, patty, cheese on patty, catsup on patty, bun, finito.
Have I been doing this wrong for the past 4 decades? How do you stack your burger?
- Only so that the veggies don't fall when you bite. Adding veggies on top makes a mess after the first few bites duh********
- Bun, mayo, lettuce, tomato, patty, cheese, onions, pickles and ketchup/mustard.monospaced
- The lettuce below keeps the bottom bun from sogging through. I feel strongly that onion and cheese should be in direct contact no matter what.monospaced
- lettuce goes at the very bottom, under the bun, on the floorkingsteven
- I can agree to the onions on cheese. That actually makes a whole lot of sense, now that you mention.dasohr
- Glad to see Mono representing the cause of The Just and The Korrekt here.Nairn
- Lettuce is always the bottom layer, after that it's dealer's choice all the way up.garbage
- lettuce on the bottom just makes the juices roll off and get everything greasy I find. wait a minute, what am I saying, I never put lettuce on anything lol_niko
- mono has gone to mcdonalds university!ArchitectofFate
- Does McDonald's even use lettuce and tomato?monospaced
- Not on their basic burgers, no, but they regularly do a thing here in the UK called a McTasty that's a quarterpounder with those and some random sauce onNairn
- Only so that the veggies don't fall when you bite. Adding veggies on top makes a mess after the first few bites duh