Logo

BURGER ANARCHY

  • About Us
  • Reviews
  • Episodes
  • Opinion
  • Recipes
  • Colophon
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask us a question

★[REVIEW] All Three Burgers / Brewdog / Camden, London

Brewdog Header

“I myself will own up to being a terrible burger chef. My burgers always turn out too dry, or else they are so moist they just fall apart; I have a tendency to choose the wrong bun and cheese; and my topping-to-meat ratio is usually off. The only thing I’m good at is making sauces for my burgers, but that’s cheating. There is a certain alchemy to a good burger that I don’t understand, and that’s part of why I really love I good burger joint burger.”

Tim Anderson, Masterchef winner and all-round good dude, writing about burgers on his blog in 2009.

Our first official burger of 2012 took us to the first London bolthole of punk rock Scottish craft brewers, Brewdog. We’d heard that its short ‘n sweet burger ‘n pizza menu had been designed by none other than Tim Anderson.

You know Tim. Off the telly. Beer geek. Proper palate skills. Terrifyingly knowledgeable. Has cooked at the Fat Duck and Noma and other places starred to the hilt. He’s a Wisconsinite, so he has a proper home ice advantage with American fare. With just three burgers on the menu we thought we’d give them all a go out of courtesy, and also because they’re really sodding cheap.

Hardcore Ale

An array of Brewdog burgers

The burgers came out closed and already cut in half, which we thought was awfully polite of them as it made the proceeding obligatory burger split photos much quicker and easier.

First we tried the Cheeseburger, known as the Los Feliz. Now, this is one thoroughly enjoyable burger. While the beef is pretty compact, visibly pre-prepped and not specifically memorable taste-wise, the overall package makes it a relishable prospect. The Punk IPA sauce looks like a Marie Rose but tastes like a mild Thousand Island nuzzled up to a Franco American mustard, and even some wasabi in there somewhere. It coats the underbelly of the burger with a tickly heat but doesn’t overpower it. Alchemy.

The Brewdog Cheeseburger

Plus, they totally lob it on the top and bottom bun, making the end product saucy in a gratefully American way; all too rare here in London. The cheese was dirty and deftly melted, combining with the wicked-smart sauce.

On to the Curry Burger. It also has a name. We can’t remember it though, because by then we were a few ales in. Although this may seem like a bleedin’ obvious statement, it actually tasted like a mouthful of beefy curry.

Nice one, Tim. It’s a genuine one-of-a-kind.

The spicy heat-laden patty is surrounded by a sweet, tangy chutney and a fresh cucumber yoghurt, with some cheese thrown in for good measure. No burger is complete without it, am I right? Uncannily curry-like and burger-ish simultaneously, this surprised and delighted the table.

Curry Burger

Finally, the pork burger. The most expensive by fifty pence or so, it’s a chunky puck of minced pork with a sauerkraut base, pickle and plenty of mustard. The vinegar hit was on the money here, a brilliantly unsubtle accompaniment for the beers on offer, but ultimately this was our least favourite of the three.

Pork Burger

It occurred to us very quickly that at £4.95, the Los Feliz is the best budget cheeseburger in London. It’s cheaper than the competition and the closest to a proper American budget cheeseburger yet, without any faux gastro posturing. And if that’s not your thing, the curry burger makes other attempts at novelty burgers just flat-out embarrassing.

We highly recommend Brewdog if you need a place to eat a decent burger and sup a quality IPA before going to see the latest post-Gothcore math-dubstep band at the Underworld.

And what pre-fame Tim wrote back in 2009? We think he’s cracked it.

  • Simon
  • Rob (And even though it weirds me out to say it, being the purists we are, I’d probably go for the curry one if you have to choose. But i’d recommend you take someone else and split that and the cheeseburger. They cut them in half for fuck’s sake, it’s practically a share request!)

Special thanks to Friend of B/A Pete for helping us with this one.


    • #Masterchef
    • #Tim Anderson
    • #brewdog
    • #camden
    • #cheap
    • #cheeseburger
    • #curry
    • #food
    • #london
    • #mustard
    • #pork
    • #pub
    • #review
    • #sauerkraut
    • #uk
    • #wasabi
    • #featured
  • 4 months ago
  • 15
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

[REVIEW] THE WORKS / LITTLE CHEF / AN A-ROAD IN NORFOLK / THE WORSTIES

“And on the whole it was edible…”

Once I knew I was heading up to Norfolk via a series of A roads, one thing came to mind instantly: Little Chef.

Many a family holiday car journey was truncated by a visit to a commonly heaving ‘Chef. The highlights were always that every kids meal came with beans ‘n chips and you got a free lollipop at the counter when the ‘rentals paid. So when the designated driver was as excited as I was to go, a plan was hatched.

Read More

    • #little chef
    • #roadside
    • #burger
    • #cheeseburger
    • #onion rings
    • #cheap
    • #dirty
    • #uk
    • #cafe
    • #norfolk
    • #review
  • 9 months ago
  • 1
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

[RECIPE] The Burger-for-a-pound Experiment

“Don’t go into a butcher’s asking for 150 grams of chuck steak to be minced.”

Is it just me that thinks it, or does getting a half-decent burger feel a bit pricey all of a sudden? Seems like you can’t find a burger for less than £6.50, let alone a cheeseburger or, god forbid, a bacon cheeseburger. I mean, for f sake, even BK’s Whopper is now nearly four quid, like, whoa.

Very mildly disgruntled, I got thinking one night and reckoned I could make a pretty frickin’ awesome burger for a pound. I set about trying to do it.

Food prices? Bring it.

Ingredients for a pound

Meat

Easy. Down to my local butcher for some prime chuck steak, double minced. Most ‘good’ burger joints swear by patties that are 170g, but I used 150g - to save a bit but retain a similar size.

Buns

Tougher. You get the best buns from independent bakers but are 40-50p each unless you get in bulk, way too pricey. I tested mass-market buns. Disappointment after disappointment; some were just too fluffy, some practically dissolved under any patty moisture.

Step up the Warburton’s bun; with the look of a McDonald’s hamburger bun and its hint of sweetness, great spongey consistency, and ability to handle the juicy impact of a patty. Winner. Not that McD’s have juice, but you get my point.

Warburton's buns

Cheese

BA has been on an ‘American (cheese) in London’ quest for AGES. Supermarket-bought brands don’t cut it. They don’t melt right and are too small. You can’t get American cheese, period. Tesco sell blocks of Kraft, but it’s the wrong type (the weird, anaemic “white” cheddar that doesn’t really melt).

Then Si found these:

Hochland cheese

They have the right thickness, actually taste of something, and melt to look JUST like nacho cheese. You can buy them from a random selection of Turkish supermarkets in London. We get ours from Akdeniz on Well Street in Hackney.

Bacon

Supermarket bought. Should have got it from the butcher. My bad. Smoked. Streaky. Grilled ‘til crisp. Bliss.

Lettuce/Onion

Standard: shredded and diced. Bought in my local market. No tomato you say? Don’t really like them in burgers that much, especially store bought ones, they ooze too much liquid. Personal choice, deal with it.

Pickles

Store bought. Personal faves.

Condiments

Classics. Heinz Ketchup /French’s Mustard.

  • Beef | 150g @ £5.65/Kg | 84p
  • Bun | 85p for 6 | 14p |
  • Cheese | £1.50 for 8 slices | 19p |
  • Bacon | £1.50 for 12 slices | 26p |
  • Onion | 12p | 3p |
  • Gherkin | 65p per jar | 2p |
  • Lettuce | 78p for 473g | 1p |
  • Sauces | £1 per 400g / £1.79 per 397g | 3p |

And the grand total is…

£1.52

And this is what I made:

The OnePounder

The OnePounder Split

No. I didn’t manage to make a burger for a pound. Gutted.

BUT, if you take away the bacon and the cheese, and make it a standard burger, it only comes to £1.07, which is pretty darn close. And, not to blow my own trumpet, it was pretty good as well.

Remember, you have to buy in quantity sometimes. Don’t be a dipshit and go into a butchers asking for 150 grams of chuck steak to be minced in an industrial butcher’s mincer. They will laugh at you.

When you can do this, it’s puts the price you pay out and about in perspective. Yeah, i didn’t use a hand-crafted sourdough bun, or aged cheddar. And i didn’t have to pay for premises rent or staff - but does that justify in excess of a fiver extra? Honestly, I’m not sure.

I’d be more than happy to cook this for anyone who wants it.

Requests through Twitter please.

It’ll cost you £6.50.

  • Rob.
    • #bacon
    • #burgers
    • #cheap
    • #cheeseburger
    • #experiment
    • #kitchen
    • #recipe
    • #value
    • #cheapskate
    • #foodhacks
  • 9 months ago
  • 2
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

[LOVE LETTERS] An Ode to Denny’s

it even comes with the slight air of melancholy and everything

If there is one thing I absolutely HAVE to do whenever I visit the States (apart from driving straight to a liquor store to grab a case of Natty Light quick smart) it’s go to Denny’s, at least twice. I love Denny’s. Seriously. Like a first born or something.

Apparently it is considered low-brow dining by some Yanks. Pffft, whatever, snobs.

I can remember my first visit vividly. I was 10 years old, on holiday in Florida with my parents, and we were searching for somewhere to have pre-Disneyworld breakfast. Life was pretty sweet. Enticed by the huge yellow sign, plus the fact that it was close by and my sister and I were engaged in a mild fistfight at the time, my parents took us in.

The menu was a smorgasbord of awesomely named food. I ordered a BLT, having never heard of such a sandwich before (it was the early Nineties and I am still positive the concept hadn’t been introduced to the UK), and it blew my tiny British mind. I’d never had such crispy weird bacon on toasted bread with so much mayo and such big tomato slices. And it was cut into quarters. And each quarter had a toothpick with a flag in it holding it together. But wait, my dad has pancakes with his bacon and eggs? What. The. Fudge.

The Amazing Grand Slam

Suffice to say that Denny’s became a regular for the rest of that holiday, and for all of my subsequent trips out there: It was the staple 3am post-party chow-down whilst I was studying in West Virginia - I would literally eat plates of hash browns with hot sauce to soak up booze. I have consumed countless Grand Slams like a ritual, with a tall glass of milk and black coffee, to treat a hangover. I’ve sat drinking milk, watching people have All-You-Can-Eat Pancakes in Vegas, too fragile to consume food. I’ve even ended a 4th of July celebration in Hermosa Beach with one of their impossibly thick omelettes, at 4am.

Now, it might sound like most of my more recent experiences have been during/post-alcohol, and that’s probably right I guess. But I have visited sober as well, and the food still stands up. Their hash browns are honestly some of my favourite of anywhere I’ve eaten them in the US.

It’s cheap, it’s tasty, and it’s all you would expect an atypical American diner experience to be; it even comes with the slight air of melancholy and everything. I’m heading back over yonder this autumn with a friend who’s never even been to the States before, so can’t wait to take him and get him all Slammed up, with a Natty Light for dessert of course.

…and I’ll review their burger too…

  • Rob.
    • #dennys
    • #usa
    • #diner
    • #cheap
    • #chain
    • #restaurant
    • #love letter
    • #opinion
  • 9 months ago
  • 8
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet
Your favourite guide to the best burgers, BBQ, baked goods and more in London, Los Angeles, New York and beyond.


    ☞ Recalcitrant.

    ☞ Steadfast.

    ☞ Intrinsically hypocritical.

    ➣ A food blog by Simon & Rob.


★ FEATURED POSTS


    FOLLOW US

    Follow @BurgerAnarchy

    loading tweets…

    • RSS
    • Random
    • Archive
    • Ask us a question
    • Mobile
    • Subscribe by email
    • Sponsor

    DESIGNED AND MANUFACTURED IN GREAT BRITAIN.