Monday, April 20, 2009

O brave new world that has cheeseburgers in it!

If a small child can be said to have a worldview, my worldview expanded exponentially the joyous day my grandmother bought me my first cheeseburger.

I was around five years old then, and the idea for franchised McDonald's outlets had yet to crystallize in Ray Kroc's imagination. But you could get a thick, juicy hamburger topped with American cheese, together with a side of salty fries, at just about any drugstore lunch counter, including
thank gods!*—the one in the Cunningham's drugstore at the corner of Harper and Gratiot in Detroit.

We walked up there, my grandma and I, from the old house on Townsend, and I had not the merest inkling that my small world was about to be changed for the better, forever. I would truly be a much altered, much happier kid on the hike back.

Sure, hamburgers had been around for eons, or decades at any rate, and cheese-topped hamburgers for almost as long. But not in my experience, because ours was not a hamburger family. My grandmother, who did all the cooking, didn't cook them. My grandfather knew not of the charcoal grill.† My mother knew not of the kitchen. My personal knowledge of ground beef began and ended with meatballs and spaghetti.

So, can you imagine my very first bite into a cheeseburger? Can you grasp the magnitude of the revelation which that was? The profundity of its impact on my worldview?

Had I known about the Big Bang theory back then, it would have been instantly relegated to second place in my hierarchy of cosmic consequence.

Oh, the thrilling mouth feel of high fat-content beef and semi-melted cheese! Oh, the savory, piquant union of impetuous mustard and impertinent pickle chip! Oh, the fabulous festival of flavor revealing to me a heretofore hidden host of possibilities in a new universe containing such unexpected truths as cheeseburgers!

Listen, I could not have been more gobsmacked had I been Moses tripping over a talkative shrub sporting non-scorching flames.

And once again I ask, how about you? Can you recall a similar worldview-expanding experience from your childhood? If so, I'm all figurative ears.

* Homage to Battlestar Gallactica.
† A grill is what you cook on; a grille is what you find on a car. Feel free to point out this distinction whenever you dine at somebody's "Bar & Grille."


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6 comments:

  1. I think this is how I felt the first time I had a "twist" from Our Place Ice Cream. Which might explain the times I would go around the block to see if Nicole could play, then really go to Our Place and purchase a "giant" (yeah, that's right, large wasn't good enough) twist, eat it as I walked down Campbell to Forest and then come home and have some reason Nicole couldn't play after all. I was a sugar-fiend from the day I was born.

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  2. Don't get me wrong, though. I rediscovered the McDonald's cheeseburger when you and Mom got me those gift certificates my sophomore year of college. Ever since I can't eat one without relishing in its tastiness.

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  3. I remember the first time I discovered that there was icecream and cookies to be purchased at Shrine's cafeteria. I had no idea that junk food was available to me and at such a low cost. It was like xmas discovering this. I was bad of course and used to borrow money, that would never be paid back, to lavish my mouth in a nice cold icecream sandwich or some large choco chip cookies. Those were the day.

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  4. I still remember Beth Usher's halloween party (second grade) because of the bowl of potato chips! Forget the apple-bobbing and party games. I stood next to the chip bowl with a kid named Billy something-or-other, who probably had discovered potato chips that day too. I gorged myself on them. It was the best party ever.

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  5. I think it may have been the day I discovered Sanders double layer chocolate cake with butter cream icing. The butter cream was mounded across the top in ribbons about an inch wide, an inch high, and all covered in the most lucious chocolate frosting. But it was the butter cream ribbons underneath the frosting that were the real orgasmic treat. There has never been, and probably never will be another butter cream to match what Sanders created. It's a well known fact among Michigan based transplants to this fine state of Texas, that the mere mention of Sanders butter cream chocolate cake is enough to send one into pure ecstacy at the very memory. It can never be replaced. And to think that Sanders eventually closed up shop! I would kill for one of those cakes.

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  6. that is why i eat a cheeseburger at least once a week.

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