Found!---The Recipe for "Mighty Mo" Sauce
THIS IS FOR
EVERYONE THE WORLD OVER WHO LIVED IN OR VISITED THE WASHINGTON, D.C. AREA IN THE
50's, 60's AND 70's AND WHO SUFFERS FROM TEARY EYES AND ACHING NOSTALGIA EVERY
TIME THEY REMEMBER THOSE WONDERFUL MIGHTY MOS AT THE HOT SHOPPES, SAUCED WITH A
SAUCE TO ABSOLUTELY DIE FOR!!!
Folks would drive for miles to a Hot Shoppes or Mighty Mo restaurant for just one Mighty Mo hamburger. Sadly, they've almost all disappeared from the Washington Scene. But, thanks to Bob Levey of the Washington Post and his faithful readers......
HERE 'TIS!!
First, a little history. Bob Levey spoke with Woodrow D. Marriott, retired vice president and general manager of Marriott Corp., who said he is the father of the Mighty Mo if anyone is. "We wanted a double-decked hamburger," he recalled, so he invented one. The company offered a reward for a name. A secretary won by naming the sandwich after the USS Missouri, a battleship whose nickname was Mighty Mo.
How did the recipe for the thick, thousand island-ish sauce develop? Marriott said he doesn't remember. Does he like the taste? "Oh, sure." Might that have had something to do with the company's decision? "You might say so."
"I don't eat hamburgers anymore, because I'm too damned old," he said. I'm 84." But the Mighty Mo was always a top seller in the Hot Shoppes chain, Marriott said.
Paul Noel, director of operations for Hot Shoppes, said you still stand a fighting chance of finding a Mighty Mo at the three remaining Hot Shoppes cafeterias---at Prince George's Plaza, Crystal City and Marlow Heights.
But Paul cautioned that the sandwich is rarely served at any of the three. "It just doesn't taste the same in a cafeteria line as it does when it's right off the grill," he said.
Although the official recipe doesn't specify it, Paul said that Hunt's ketchup ("thicker than others") was used in the Mighty Mo sauce. Also, Redpack chili sauce, which is sold only to restaurants and isn't available to riffraff like you and me.
Asked if either the Mighty Mo or Hot Shoppes restaurants might reappear, Paul said the chances are "not very good".
A LITTLE HISTORY (from "Hot Shoppes Cookbook: Sixty Years of American
Cookery"):
The Mighty Mo has been a Hot Shoppes classic through the years. Because
it was the first triple-decker hamburger in the Washington area, however, no one
knew what to call it---so one of Mr. Marriott's principal assistants organized a
contest. The winner chose the nickname of the great battleship Missouri,
perhaps because she knew our big juicy sandwich would make a considerable splash
with hamburger fans. And these burgers became so well known, that when a
Washington radio station donated a white tiger named Moheni to the
National Zoo, he was nicknamed "Might Mo" (in the years that followed, Bill
Marriott and the tiger developed a cautiously warm relationship, often posing
together for publicity photographs)."
MIGHTY MO
THE FAMOUS
SAUCE:
1/2 cup Hunt's Ketchup
1/4 cup chili sauce
1-1/2 teaspoons A-1 Sauce
1/2 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
2 drops Tabasco Sauce
1/2 cup finely chopped sweet pickle
1-1/4 cups mayonnaise
Combine ketchup, chili sauce, A-1 Sauce, Worcestershire sauce and
Tabasco Sauce. Add pickle to sauce mixture. Combine the sauce-pickle mixture
with mayonnaise, stirring until well-blended. Store in a tightly covered
container under refrigeration until time of service.
NOW, TO FASHION A FULL-BLOWN MIGHTY MO.....
1 uncut sesame seed hamburger roll (sesame seeds also must be uncut)
1 tablespoon of softened margarine
2 hamburger patties, each two ounces
Salt to taste
White pepper to taste
1 tablespoon shredded lettuce
1 slice American cheese
4 teaspoons Mighty Mo sauce
2 dill pickle chips
Cut hamburger roll crosswise into three equal slices. Spread bottom, top
and one side of center cut of bun with margarine. Grill bun until lightly
browned and heated throughout.
Shape hamburger into thin 4-inch diameter patties. Grill very lightly on
both sides. Do not overcook. Grill second hamburger very lightly on one side,
turn and top with American cheese and grill lightly. Do not overcook.
Spread two teaspoons of Mighty Mo sauce on bottom of roll. Top dressing
with shredded lettuce, then hamburger. Top hamburger with middle layer of bun,
grilled side up. Spread with remaining Mighty Mo sauce.
Top with cheeseburger. Place pickle chips on cheese. Cover with top of
bun. Do not cut.
One must
always remember that there is really no substitute for the name brands listed,
or the measurements or proportions. These burgers were the gooiest and probably
that fattiest thing in town, but totally luuuuuuuvvvvvved!!!!