By Sharon Roznik

Obsessive-compulsive? Definitely, Gorske said. He once ate a Big Mac from Hawaii that a friend mailed to him.

"I froze it and then I baked it in the oven for 15 minutes at 400 degrees. I figured if that didn't kill the germs, nothing would,” he told action Reporter Media in 2011.

Gorske claims that after getting his first car on May 17, 1972, he headed straight to a McDonald’s in his hometown. He bit into the burger, and something powerful took hold.

Since then, the former prison guard has made guest appearances on Jimmy Kimmel, Rachael Ray, Lopez Tonight and Good Morning America, to name a few, and was even the focus of a joke on Saturday Night Live and a question in the game "Trivial Pursuit." He is featured in the 2005 documentary Don Gorske: Mac Daddy and authored 22,477 Big Macs in 2008.

Just recently, Gorske paid tribute to Big Mac inventor Michael “Jim” Delligatti, who passed away Monday at age 98. Normally, on that day of the week, Gorske would have taken a sandwich from his freezer stash and heated it up in the microwave.

Instead, he ate at his special spot at McDonald’s and marked the occasion by holding up a photo of Delligatti while his wife took a snapshot for posterity.

“This was strange for me, really weird, because it was also my birthday, and I got an email that day from Guinness saying my record still stands,” Gorske said.

His wife, Mary Gorske, didn’t partake with him. In fact, she doesn’t much like meat but does insist he purchase a parfait of yogurt topped with fruit.

“She told me I should eat something healthy, and she’s a nurse," Gorske said. "I think it’s paid off because I get a clean bill of health every year."

On Mondays, he usually purchases six Big Macs and four parfaits to last him through Wednesday, On Thursday, he purchases eight Big Macs and another four parfaits. He loves the taste of the burger microwaved, when all the flavors meld together just right.

A Big Mac contains 540 calories, with 28% fat, according to McDonald's. At one or two Big Macs per day and little else beside Coke and the low-fat parfait, he probably eats fewer calories than many people do.

In fact, his cholesterol has never been over 160 mg/dL, he said, and he weighs in at around 200 pounds on a 6-foot, 2-inch tall frame.

Now retired, Gorske says he keeps busy doing yard work, bowling in several leagues, playing with his grandchildren and traveling to sports venues with his buddy, Don “Bones” Krause.

“My wife took two trips with me in 1999 and told me she didn’t want to go with me anymore, because she needed a vacation after the vacation,” Gorske said.

He has visited every NFL and Major League Baseball stadium, and he's a huge NASCAR fan. “Bones” said it can be a real pain traveling with Gorske because he always steals the limelight. People, especially kids, recognize him from the Super Size Me movie, which is played in every high school health class across the nation to warn kids about the dangers of eating fast food.

If he lives as long as his dad, Gorske will have consumed 40,000 Big Macs when he turns 86. Wrappers and proofs-of-purchase cluttering his home will be evidence of his gastronomic legacy.

“It’s not something I obsess about, but I tell my kids that when I do go, they better know the count of the last Big Mac I’ve eaten.”

Follow Sharon Roznik on Twitter: @sharonroznik