The Big Texan Steak Ranch

(Redirected from Big Texan)

The Big Texan Steak Ranch is a steakhouse restaurant and motel located in Amarillo, Texas, United States, which opened on the previous U.S. Route 66 in the 4500 block of East Amarillo Boulevard in 1960. It relocated to its present location on Interstate 40 in 1970. Fire gutted the west wing of the restaurant in 1976 and destroyed $100,000 in antiques. The restaurant reopened as a larger facility in 1977. The building is painted a bright yellow, with blue trim. A large bull statue advertises their "free" 72 oz. steak (see below). The now-closed Texas Tornado Museum resided off in a far corner of the parking lot on the property.[1][2]

The Big Texan Steak Ranch
Front view of the Big Texan Steak Ranch
Map
Restaurant information
Established1960; 64 years ago (1960)
Food typeSteakhouse
Dress codeCasual
Street address7701 Interstate 40 Access Rd
CityAmarillo, Texas
CountryUnited States
Websitewww.bigtexan.com

72oz Steak Challenge

edit
 
Two men take the steak challenge on April 6, 2008

The Big Texan is best known for its 72 ounce (4.5 pounds or 2.04 kg) steak. The steak is free to anyone who, in one hour or less, can eat the entire meal, consisting of the steak itself, a bread roll with butter, a baked potato, shrimp cocktail, and a side salad; otherwise, the meal costs $72.[3] Those who have successfully consumed the 72oz steak challenge have their names recorded and posted at the restaurant. The table at which the steak is eaten is recorded on a 24/7 live stream which can be found on the restaurant's website. To date, over 10,000 people out of about 90,000 people who attempted this challenge have accomplished this feat.

According to the restaurant, when featured on the TV show Man v. Food, the challenge started in 1960, when founder Bob Lee decided to hold a contest over which of the cowboys working in the stockyards could eat the most steaks in one hour, with a prize of $5 (equivalent to $51 in 2023) at stake. One cowboy ate four and a half 1-pound steaks, a shrimp cocktail, a baked potato, a dinner roll, and a salad in the hour's time to win the $5. Lee was so impressed with the achievement that he declared, "Whoever eats that much again in my restaurant, he gets it for free." Those who take on the 72oz steak challenge are required to pay for the meal in advance and, if they are successful, their money is refunded. The steak is cooked to the participant's preference, and the challenge takes place at a table for six on a raised platform in the middle of the main dining room.

The record for the shortest time to finish the entire 72oz steak challenge had been held by competitive eating champion Joey Chestnut (at 8 minutes and 52 seconds), breaking Frank Pastore's 1987 record (of 9 minutes 30 seconds, which stood for 21 years) on his March 24, 2008 visit. On May 26, 2014, he was bested by 125-pound competitive eater Molly Schuyler, who polished off the meal in just 4 minutes 58 seconds, and came back for seconds (14 minutes and 57 seconds for two meals).[4] She did not, however, eat a third steak meal in the same hour. Schuyler returned on April 19, 2015 and would finish her first meal in 4 minutes 18 seconds, beating her own record by 40 seconds. She had defeated four other teams of competitors in the challenge, devouring two more meals in twenty minutes.[5] The unofficial record (for all animals, including humans) was held by a 500-pound Siberian tiger who ate the steak in 90 seconds in 1999, until bested by a lioness in 2012 clocking in at 80 seconds.[6]

In media

edit
 
Close-up of entrance to Big Texan Steak Ranch

The 72oz Steak Challenge meal is shown in the movie Waking Up in Reno, with Billy Bob Thornton taking the challenge. It is also shown on the Travel Channel's Man v. Food, where host Adam Richman completes the challenge and in Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations, where Bourdain declines to compete but his cameraman takes part and fails.

The Big Texan Steak Ranch is known for its Cadillac white stretch limos with longhorn hood ornaments,[7] one of which appears in the 2006 animated film Cars as Texas oil baron Tex Dinoco. Becky Ransom and the Big Texan Steak Ranch ("free 72-ounce steak if consumed in 60 minutes") are acknowledged in the film's credits.

In the Season 3 episode of King of the Hill "And They Call It Bobby Love", the Steak Ranch was parodied with a similar restaurant called the "Panhandler Steakhouse." Bobby Hill accepts the challenge only to spite the girl that spurned his affections (who was also a vegetarian). He completes the challenge but upon returning home subsequently vomits.

In a season 10 episode of The Simpsons "Maximum Homerdrive" Homer accepts a big-steak eating contest.

A billboard advertising the restaurant appears in a panel in George Takei's autobiographical graphic novel They Called us Enemy.

Big Texan Motel

edit

Located adjacent to the restaurant on The Big Texan Steak Ranch property is the 54-unit Big Texan Motel. The cinder-block construction motel is designed to resemble a main street in an old west town, and features Texas-themed decor and a Texas-shaped pool. In 2004, a 20-stall stable was added behind the main motel building.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Gruben, Erin E. (August 2001). "Happy Trails". Texas Monthly.
  2. ^ "Big Texan Steak Ranch". OutdoorFlix.com. Archived from the original on 2008-05-15. Retrieved 2004-07-08.
  3. ^ "The 72 Oz Steak Rules". The Big Texan. Archived from the original on 2013-07-28. Retrieved 2013-08-17.
  4. ^ "Woman eats pair of 72-ounce steak dinners -- in less than 15 minutes". Amarillo Globe-News. Archived from the original on 2015-04-20. Retrieved 3 April 2015.
  5. ^ "120-pound woman eats three 72-ounce steak dinners in 20 minutes". Amarillo Globe-News. Archived from the original on 2015-04-22. Retrieved 2015-04-20.
  6. ^ "Lioness breaks Big Texan steak-eating record". Amarillo Globe-News. 2012-07-28. Retrieved 2017-06-18.
  7. ^ Benson, Sara (2010). USA's Best Trips: 99 Themed Itineraries Across America - Sara Benson, Amy Balfour - Google Boeken. ISBN 9781741797350. Retrieved 2012-06-22.
edit

35°11′39″N 101°45′16″W / 35.194055°N 101.754448°W / 35.194055; -101.754448