Big King

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Big King
Serving size 1 sandwich (196 g)
Calories 490
Total fat 28 g (43 %)
Saturated fat 11 g (60 %)
Trans fat 1 g
Cholesterol 85 mg ( %)
Sodium 700 mg ( %)
Total carbohydrate 32 g (11 %)
Dietary fiber 2 g (8 %)
Sugars 7 g
Protein 27 g
Source Burger King Canada
Notes 1. The % Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet. 2. All data displayed follow the Canadian Food and Drug Act and Regulation regarding the rounding of nutritional data.

The Big King sandwich is a hamburger sold by the international fast-food restaurant chain Burger King. It is one of their products oriented to late teen to young adult males.

Contents

[edit] Product description

The Big King is a hamburger, consisting of two (2) grilled beef patties, sesame seed bun, King Sauce (a Thousand Island dressing variant), iceberg lettuce, onions, pickles and two (2) slices of American cheese. The product has been discontinued in United States, but is available in other regions such as Sweden, Brazil, Spain, Germany, Italy, Canada, Denmark, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey .

[edit] Variants

The Big King originally was configured identically to the McDonald's Big Mac with the three (3) piece roll. It was reformulated later as a standard double burger.

  • The Big King (alias)
  • The Double Supreme (alias)
  • The King Supreme (alias)
  • The King Supreme Jr. (Single hamburger patty)
  • Hambúrger Supremo (Brazilian version of King Supreme Jr.)
  • The Big King XXL (a 1/2 pound Big King, with two Whopper patties)

[edit] History

Originally, the burger had a look and composition that resembled the Big Mac: it had two beef patties, "King" sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles and onions on a three-part sesame seed bun. Because its patties are flame-broiled and larger than McDonald's grill fried, seasoned hamburger patties and the different formulation of the "King Sauce" vs. McDonald's "Special sauce", the sandwich had a similar, but not exact, taste and different caloric content. Burger King eventually reformulated the sandwich to use a standard hamburger roll, presumably as a cost measure.

The Big King was first created in 1998. During its initial launch period in 1996, it was called the Double Supreme Cheeseburger, but later was renamed as the Big King when it was relaunched a year later.[1] In 2001, the company re-branded it to the current King Supreme name as part of a menu reorganization designed to better compete with a similar planned menu expansion at McDonald's early the next year.[2] While the sandwich was discontinued in the United States in 2003, sales continued in Canada and parts of Europe. The sandwich was also modified in Canada and parts of South and Central America to include as single patty version and a larger version, called the King Supreme XXL, in Europe. The larger version drew the ire of the Spanish government because its overly large portion size, 1/2 pound (226.8g), and high levels of fat, calories and sodium.[3]

Recently BK has begun to sell a new sandwich line called the BK Stacker, which has drawn some comparisons to the Big King. However, the sandwich does not contain vegetables and includes bacon.

[edit] Advertising

The King Supreme debut with an advertising campaign created by the McCaffery Ratner Gottlieb & Lane agency which featured blues legend B.B. King. The ads pushed the companies lunch and dinner periods as the best time to have the sandwich and had King doing a voice over in which he alternately talked or sang about the sandwiches.[4]

The company's online advertising program in Spain states that the BK XXL line as being made "with two enormous portions of flame-broiled meat that will give you all the energy you need to take the world by storm." This claim combinded with the television advertising were the prime motivators behind the Spanish government's concerns with the XXL sandwich line. The government claimed that campaign violated an agreement with the government to comply with an initiative on curbing obesity by promoting such a large and unhealthy sandwich. In response to the government's claims, Burger King replied in a statement: "In this campaign, we are simply promoting a line of burgers that has formed part of our menu in recent years. Our philosophy can be summed up with the motto 'As you like it,' in which our customers' taste trumps all." The company went on to say the it offers other healthier items such as salads and that customers are free to choose their own foods and modify them as the desire.[3]

[edit] Naming and trademarks

The name Big King is a common law mark of Burger King Holdings and is displayed with the raised "TM" (™) symbol in the US and Canada. In Brazil it is a registered trademark of Burger King Corporation and is displayed with the ® symbol. Burger King currently does not have any trademarks on the Big King line of sandwiches in Europe.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Arthur Lubow (1998-04-19). Steal This Burger. The New York Times. Retrieved on 2007-12-04. “Burger King reports that in blind tastings consumers prefer its recently introduced Big King to the Big Mac by a wide margin.”
  2. ^ Amy Zuber (2001-12-17). Listen up, Mac: BK aims to reign supreme, orders menu changes. Nation's Restaurant News. Retrieved on 2007-12-04. “The new "King Supreme" -- which will replace Burger King's poor-selling Big King--is similar to the Big Mac except that the burger will be flame-broiled and topped with a different sauce and no middle bun will be used, according to BK spokesman Rob Doughty.”
  3. ^ a b AP Wire (2006-11-16). Spain Nixes Burger King Ad. CBS News. Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  4. ^ Burger King Launches BB King Ad Campaign. Restaurant Business News (2002-01-14). Retrieved on 2007-12-04. “"When we developed these new sandwiches, we asked him [BB King] to star in the commercials to lend his musical talent and to acknowledge our customers' tastes not only in food but also in music."”

[edit] See also

Similar sandwiches by other vendors: