Anti-meat eaters are gonna have a cow.
Fast foodies are just finding out that Wendy’s much-fabled “T-Rex” isn’t a mere myth but, instead, a hulking hot commodity on the restaurant’s top-secret menu.
“Nine patties,” raved virtual chowhound @JoeOhEats before struggling to wrap his mouth around the dinosaur-esque sandwich.
“Pure cow,” continued the Chicago-based content creator between messy bites of the greasy, goopy grub for more than 1.2 million TikTok viewers.
It may be a feast for the eyes, but it’s likely torture on the tummy.
Most secret menu items, such as the McDonald’s “McGangBang — a “monstrosity” made up of a double cheeseburger and a McChicken (spicy or mild) — or Chik-fil-A’s once hush-hush breakfast bite — a spicy chicken filet and strawberry jam atop a buttered biscuit — don’t sound overly appetizing.
And the T-Rex is no exception to the rule.
Representatives for Wendy’s did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.
The super-stacked snack comes complete with nine beef patties, just as many slices of cheese, some lettuce, onion and tomatoes, as well as pickles, ketchup and mayonnaise.
Clocking in at around 3,000 calories, the bulky burger can cost between $22 to $30, depending on the Wendy’s location. However, it isn’t available at all chain stops.
In fact, the mountainous mouthful wasn’t even made available to the public until a cheeky customer ordered a T-Rex as a joke back in 2013, per TheTakeout.com.
Shortly after the initial creation went viral online, a Canada-based Wendy’s began selling it as an official novelty item.
But, owing to the nutritional risks of consuming the colossal skyscraper, the burger was quickly removed from the menu.
Still, lucky Wendy’s devotees across the U.S. and Canada can get tastes of the T-Rex at certain restaurants where the cook doesn’t mind letting the secret menu item out to play.
Some spots reportedly even offer the behemoth with up to 12 patties.
Anthony Villegas, a virtual influencer, recently scored the standard nine-decker at Wendy’s near his home in California.
However, almost immediately after getting his hands on the rare find, he found that it was too much to handle.
“I mean, it’s good — it doesn’t taste bad,” said Villegas in a recorded review. “It’s just so big.”
And he was emphatic about his chances of ever sampling the beastly burger another time.
“Am I ever doing this again?” he said while pointing to the burger, “No! No, no, no, no!
“Never, ever, ever, ever!”