6/27/06 $100 burger: Tasty or Tasteless?
Howard Goodman, Palm Beach columnist
- 06/27/2006
That $100 burger may be tasty, but it's also tasteless
Howard Goodman Palm Beach columnist
June 27, 2006
Just in time for your Fourth of July barbecue: the $100 hamburger.
The Old Homestead Steak House in the Boca Raton Resort & Club put
this baby on the menu to great fanfare last week.
Their 20-ounce softball-size burger is made from beef from three
continents: corn-fed American prime; free-range cattle from the
Argentine pampas, and Japanese Kobe from cattle that were fed
soybeans and beer, bathed in sake and massaged by hand.
For the debut last Tuesday, "the coveted ingredients were flown in
fresh," the restaurant's publicists said, "and delivered by armored
car to a synchronized cavalcade of 10 uniformed chefs who ground,
chopped and basted the beef" to be cooked up by a former executive
chef for Donald Trump.
It was history in the making -- a milestone of hyperbole, if not
gastronomy. Restaurant owners Greg and Marc Sherry called their
creation "the Beluga caviar of sandwiches" and "the Romeo and Juliet
of food."
I haven't tasted this two-handed ode to excess, which comes with a
special chipotle sauce mixed with white truffles and champagne. Mere
ketchup isn't allowed.
I asked, but my editor wouldn't expense it. "You can get a burger at
The Green Owl for $4.95," he growled.
I did, however, stop by another Boca Raton eatery, the five-day-a-
week soup kitchen called Boca Helping Hands. It's in a little rented
church building a short drive from the famed resort.
About 75 people showed up on Monday for the free lunch, while the
staff made up another 27 meals for home deliveries.
Monday is usually the day for a ground-beef casserole and for fresh
shipments of fruits, salads and breads. It's amazing how much good
food gets tossed because it's deemed too old for grocery shelves.
A $100 hamburger? Walter Palickas, the soup kitchen's manager, said
he could buy 50 pounds of ground beef for that money.
"I could feed 120 people," Palickas said.
That would be people like Darryl and Stephanie Knight, and
Stephanie's daughter Kimberly Belmar, a junior at Lake Worth High.
Darryl is on disability with a bad back, his wife said. Stephanie
works intermittently. They were eating at the soup kitchen and
bringing desserts home because they couldn't make their food stamps -
- $168 worth -- stretch across the whole month.
"Sometimes we're out of food," she told me. Then, joking: "My
husband eats a lot."
Increasingly, Boca Helping Hands, an interfaith charity, is serving
the working poor, says executive director Joanne Szaja. "A lot of it
is the rising gas prices," Szaja said. "That comes right off the
top, right out of the food budget."
We live in a region of plenty that offers the amusement of a $100
hamburger. At the same time, 800,000 people in South Florida live
below the poverty line, according to organizations that track
hunger.
Last year, 23,000 people in Palm Beach County sought emergency food
provided, in part, by the Daily Bread Food Bank, a clearinghouse for
donations. That's in addition to another 30,000 people in Broward
and 64,000 in Miami-Dade.
"It's a huge problem," says Judith Gatti,executive director of Daily
Bread, based in Miami.
Some 800 nonprofits are running programs to combat hunger in South
Florida. They're supported by thousands of donors -- including many
from the restaurant industry, Gatti said.
Despite the generous effort, the need keeps growing. In recent
years, the ranks of those seeking emergency food aid in America are
increasing nearly 1 percent a year, she said.
The $100 hamburger?
"We could provide 600 meals for that," said Gatti. The economy is
achieved by collecting and redistributing discarded and donated
food, millions of pounds worth a year.
One hundred dollars.
It can buy three meals a day for a child for 200 days.
Or one ritzy burger.
Howard Goodman's column is published Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday.
He can be reached at
hgoodman@sun-sentinel.com or 561-243-6638.