1. McDonald's Double Quarter Pounder With Cheese
2. Burger King Triple Whopper with Bacon & Cheese
3. Wendy's Big Bacon Classic Triple
4. Hardee's Monster Burger
5. Checkers/Rally's Baconzilla Burger
6. Dairy Queen 1/2 lb Triple Signature Flamethrower Stackburger
7. In-N-Out Double-Double Burger
8.Jack in the Box Bacon Ultimate Cheeseburger
9. Wendy's Pretzel Baconator
10. Jack in the Box Bacon Double Smashed Jack
11. Five Guys Bacon Cheeseburger
12. Sonic SuperSONIC Bacon Double Cheeseburger
13. Shake Shack Double Smokeshack
14. Whataburger's Triple Meat Whataburger
15. McDonald's Bacon Quarter Pounder with Cheese
Thanks for the list. One of each, please.
The one I cook at home is just as unhealthy...But it’s a lot cheaper.
Uh-huh.
And in other breaking news, everyone who ate only health foods during the 18th century is dead. QED
None of them is unhealthy as a separate ingredient...but put them together...and you’re all gonna die.
I don’t think I have ever had any one of those sandwiches. The worst part to me is there is too much bun on most burgers.
At least there are fish options
Is Wendy’s Baconator #16?
Something that used to be in the 60s and early 70s but not very common, were rare places around the nation that sold giant hamburgers like maybe 6 or 8 inches in diameter.
Hey, where’s my favorite? Checker’s Big Buford is a great burger, and it’s got to be as unhealthy as some of those on the list.
The Double Quarter Pounder is heavy on beef and cheese and relatively light on bun. That actually makes it one of their healthier burgers IMO.
Almost every item on the list is the double or triple version of their most popular ones, respectively.
lol
so stupid
A hamburger is nothing more than a balanced meal stacked
It is a serving of meat, with a salad and a roll. If you eat it with a strawberry shake you also get fruit and dairy.
Never had any of them. The only fast food burger places here are McDonald’s, Wendy’s and Burger King, and I eat at none of them.
Yum! Fuddruckers! Now, that’s a burger!
Occasionally, my wife and I will share McDonald’s Double Quarter Pounder with Cheese.
Did they recommend Cricket Burgers with non-dairy bean oil cheese?
What about Whammy Burger or the Big Kahuna Burger?
“These options are packed with calories, saturated fat, sodium, and, in some cases, trans fat. None of the burgers on this list has less than 15 grams of saturated fat—exceeding the American Heart Association’s daily limit of about 13 grams.”
OK. It is bogus.
“He analysed the World Health Organisation data to do this. His first seven countries were those with the lowest consumption of saturated fat. These were Georgia, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan, Moldova, Croatia, Macedonia and the Ukraine. Kendrick’s second seven countries were those with the highest consumption of saturated fat. These were Austria, Finland, Belgium, Iceland, Netherlands, Switzerland and France. Every single one of the seven countries with the lowest consumption of saturated fat had significantly higher heart disease than every single one of the countries with the highest consumption of saturated fat. This concludes the exact opposite of the Keys’ Seven Countries assertion. Does Kendrick go on to assert that high saturated fat consumption causes low heart disease and low saturated fat consumption causes high heart disease. Of course he doesn’t. He is too sensible and responsible to do so (actually, having met Kendrick, I take this back! He was probably laughing or crying too much to do so).
There are three facts that I can state without any fear of being proven wrong:
1) It has not been proven that saturated fat consumption causes heart disease;
2) It has not even been proven that there is a consistent association between saturated fat consumption and heart disease;
3) The definitive study to try to prove this has not been done and likely never will be.”
https://www.zoeharcombe.com/the-knowledge/saturated-fat-does-not-cause-heart-disease/
“Evidence from prospective cohort studies does not support current dietary fat guidelines: a systematic review and meta-analysis”:
“Results: Across 7 studies, involving 89 801 participants (94% male), there were 2024 deaths from CHD during the mean follow-up of 11.9±5.6 years. The death rate from CHD was 2.25%. Eight data sets were suitable for inclusion in meta-analysis; all excluded participants with previous heart disease. Risk ratios (RRs) from meta-analysis were not statistically significant for CHD deaths and total or saturated fat consumption. The RR from meta-analysis for total fat intake and CHD deaths was 1.04 (95% CI 0.98 to 1.10). The RR from meta-analysis for saturated fat intake and CHD deaths was 1.08 (95% CI 0.94 to 1.25).
Conclusions: Epidemiological evidence to date found no significant difference in CHD mortality and total fat or saturated fat intake and thus does not support the present dietary fat guidelines. The evidence per se lacks generalisability for population-wide guidelines.”
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27697938/