Viewing entries tagged
california

Zephyr Burger / London, UK

Zephyr Burger / London, UK

The initial big bang of quality burgers that emerged in London years back spoiled us. But in the years following, the flow of quality newcomers has ebbed rather than flowed. As some of the big hitters dipped in quality with expansion, newcomers heralded as the second coming of beefy Jesus have been disappointing. But this year it feels like the tide might be changing, as some of the new additions to London seem to be proving. Zephyr are one of them.

Describing themselves as a 'California Kitchen', their message is very on point indeed: The name reminds us of a tune from L.A. band Red Hot Chili Peppers which was the soundtrack that defined the Summer of 2002 for a lot of pre-Millennials. The palm trees on their logo are very reminiscent of those that adorn the packaging from California burger legends In-N-Out. They also proudly embrace the 'farm to table' ethos that defines Southern California in particular. Their website proudly notes that the 'Beef, Bread and Salad' are sourced directly from the producers.  We'd love to know if they can name the farm that provided the milk for the their 'American' cheese slices. 

Cheeseburger

Much like Hollywood does, the Zephyr gang know that image is everything and this is a masterclass in the art of Instagram-friendly burger aesthetics:  The burger is half wrapped so that it opens out like a meaty bouquet, exposing the charred patties and cheese, when you hold it. The sauce is placed on the inside edge of the bun so that it oozes out with a delicate squeeze. The thinly-sliced red onion and sliced red and green chilis peek out with flashes of colour, and the chives that are sprinkled on it contribute nothing to the flavour but everything to the fresh, vibrant look. It’s a filter-friendly rainbow of a sandwich.

For all the thinly-veiled cynicism the last two paragraphs have, none of it really matters because the cheeseburger is fucking delicious. 

The Ginger Pig sourced meat has a super meaty depth, the aged fat included in the blend really works to add an unctuous note to the taste. Balls of meat are smashed to produce a great crust to the patties and are fried with mustard added, in the signature In-N-Out Animal Style way, to cut the savoury with an edge of sourness. Having made it many, many times ourselves, we'd swear blind the sauce is food legend Kenji's In-N-Out Spread recipe - it is perfectly sweet and piquant with an underlying mayo-y creaminess, arguably the greatest burger condiment ever produced (for challengers see: Big Mac Sauce). The red onions add crunch and sourness, the shredded lettuce adds a fresh bite, and the red and green chilis add more crunch with a very light dusting of heat at the end.  

It is a perfectly balanced menage of flavours. The Double Double (a shameless name pull from In-N-Out) throws way more deep meatiness in to the mix. If you add some exceptional thick, almost Canadian-style smoked bacon to the mix you can get a great additional sweet smoky chew too.

Bacon Cheeseburger

Sure they've nicked a bunch of ideas from Californian burgers, from one amazing place in particular, but they are *brilliant* ideas which deserve to be nicked and come together to make one of the most creative yet familiar burgers we've had in London in a long time. We went twice in a week, it was that good. If we didn't have to watch our cholesterol we would continue to go twice a week too. 

 

You can find Zephyr at Kerb and various other locations pretty regularly. Follow them on the ‘gram for sure and check them out.  

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Grilled Cheese Truck / Los Angeles, CA

Sometimes an idea comes along that is so simple, and yet so totally ingenious that you just have to stand up and slow clap the dudes that thought it up, ‘Lucas’ style. So we applaud the comfort food genius that is Los Angeles’ Grilled Cheese Truck.

What’s all the more awesome is that these guys take such a staple, classic, comfort food and reinvent it with panache too. It’s testament to how well they do it that I’ve seen queues for this mobile eatery easily stretch 20-plus long. Our first visit attempt was at the fairly legendary Abbot Kinney First Fridays festival in Venice. The trouble was we’d already tried five trucks by the time we spotted them. Dammit.

And those queues are there for good reason; their Cheesy Mac And Rib is hugely satisfying. The barbecue pork was saucy-sweet, soft and worthy of a place all of its own on a menu. The mac ‘n cheese was heavy on the gooey cheese, sticky yet still trying to escape from every opening, and hinted a savouriness that balanced with the pork brilliantly. One hell of a sandwich.

I’m pretty sure I put this away in under ten mouthfuls it was so good, and if we weren’t going on to somewhere else for more food, I would have had another. A bang up job, and a must for anyone In L.A. who has only got time to visit a handful of food trucks.

  • Rob.
Grilled Cheese Truck on Urbanspoon

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Gott's Roadside / San Francisco

But the sauce…

This place is nestled within the Ferry Building Marketplace, which fells like a cross between Borough Market and the arty-farty food court at Stratford Westfield. Only more awesome. Than both. See #AmericansDoItBetter. It has a canteen/trendy bar/workshop vibe about it, which works since it does indeed manage to be both trendy and comfortable at the same time.

I like that they are attempting to blur the line between the restaurant burger and the fast food burger here - It was pretty quick to arrive and looked great, the yellow colouring of the bun innards popping on first glance.

It was a solid effort. A well cooked patty and wicked gooey American cheese with all the necessary extras. But the sauce… well, the sauce just added a *meh* factor.

Yeah, most ‘special sauces’ have their basis in a version of Thousand Island. But, don’t just use Thousand Island, which it tasted like Gott’s did. Maybe I’m being harsh and they do create their own sauce, but it’s so uncannily Thou’land that it just detracted from the positives of the rest of the burger.

I’d go back to try their other offerings, and their bacon cheeseburger, because it’s such a neat place, in a really neat place.

gotts.com

  • Rob.
Gott's Roadside on Urbanspoon

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Cafe 222 / San Diego, CA

It’s a hard knock yolk

In the past, I’ve always been ‘You CANNOT get a bad Eggs Benedict in the states esse’ (Yup, just like that). Well, you can scratch that now, I found a place.

Having found some good reviews of Café 222, we wandered for way longer than our hangovers desired to check it out. We were both in a Benedict mood so I had the pork patty version, whilst my compadre had the standard.

It was a less than overwhelming sight when it arrived. The hollandaise looked like it had separated a bit on both our plates, leaving speckles of melted butter floating around. It tasted like it looked, heavy and buttery. And when I cut into the eggs, the yolks were hard. I was like, this must be a mistake, but my friend cut into his and.. the same. Who cooks the yolks to solid in a fucking Benny?! The griddled potatoes were ok, but not enough of a saving grace for that travesty.

This place had won some gold medallion food award SIX years in a row? Fuck that shit.

Luckily, we also ordered a much-lauded-on-the-interwebs waffle. Our choice was the stuffed granola, and it was great. The chunks of granola intermingled with the waffle batter was a novel touch, and tasty as with heaps of maple syrup poured over. Now *there* was the saving grace we’d been looking for. If I’d’ve just had the Benny, I’d’ve been pissed.

cafe222.com

  • Rob.
Cafe 222 on Urbanspoon

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Slammin' Sliders Truck / Los Angeles, CA

“I guess I expected more from something with ‘Kobe’ in the title…”

Sadly, the story of where I had to go to find this truck is *far* more interesting than the food that came from it: I found myself on USC’s Fraternity Row during some mental party night. Not only did I feel like a weird, peckish paedophile - trying not to look at any of the scantily clad sorority girls walking from frat house to frat house. But simultaneously, I felt like I was in some irreverent college film, so familiar did the surroundings feel to my moviephile self. Odd.

The beef sliders were distinctly unimpressive.

Uncondimented.

After adding some ketchup to them they tasted almost identical to McDonald’s cheeseburgers, just with slightly better meat - not necessarily a bad thing, I like the way they taste, but I guess I expected more from something with ‘Kobe’ in the title.

The pork sliders looked great, but the pork was really dry, with no BBQ sauce to accompany it. The slaw, whilst a colourful spectacle, tasted like crunchy-but-watery mayo and failed to moisten the pork.

In their defence, I did catch the place just as it was about to close, so maybe I didn’t get the freshest peak-time fare, but it turned me off going back there, and left me thinking that a good slider is always hard to find, even in the States.

slamminsliders.com

  • Rob.
Slammin Sliders Gourmet Food Truck on Urbanspoon

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