there's a Trill Burger at Dynamo stadium. it was dollar dog night, so we cheaped out and the line for the burgers was massive. but, i will tell you what. that smell coming from their stand was absolutely incredible.
Are you talking about Drake?rcb said:
Canadians demanding a tip at Trill Burger?? Oh the delicious irony…
MarathonAg12 said:Are you talking about Drake?rcb said:
Canadians demanding a tip at Trill Burger?? Oh the delicious irony…
BG Knocc Out said:Unfortunately, those prices don't seem too out of line for a non-fast food chain burger combo meal nowadays.Psycho Bunny said:I guess so. This is what I found on yelp. Question? When did tipping become a thing for making a burger. I don't tip the people at Whataburger for making a patty. Either way, I won't be going there anytime soon. So many other places just as good. Pete's burger is a great place, for those in the Kingwood, Porter and New Caney area.Coog97 said:
Is it really $20 for a burger-fries combo?!?!?
Psycho Bunny said:I guess so. This is what I found on yelp. Question? When did tipping become a thing for making a burger. I don't tip the people at Whataburger for making a patty. Either way, I won't be going there anytime soon. So many other places just as good. Pete's burger is a great place, for those in the Kingwood, Porter and New Caney area.Coog97 said:
Is it really $20 for a burger-fries combo?!?!?
Bigballin said:
Waiting in line for a burger is in the same realm as waiting for bbq…not going to do it.
Likely a good burger but appears to be a lot of hype
I was in California last week on business and decided to try In N Out just to quell the hype. I've not bothered to try one in the Houston area yet and since I was there on business with little better to do I figured I'd go find one and give it a shot.Bigballin said:
Waiting in line for a burger is in the same realm as waiting for bbq…not going to do it.
Likely a good burger but appears to be a lot of hype
Good news for you, Tookies is a ghost town these days at lunch because it is a PITA to get to with the constructionPsycho Bunny said:
Tookies burgers is the only place I'll wait in a long line. Trill burgers looks like smash burgess but at Union Kitchen prices.
redaszag99 said:Good news for you, Tookies is a ghost town these days at lunch because it is a PITA to get to with the constructionPsycho Bunny said:
Tookies burgers is the only place I'll wait in a long line. Trill burgers looks like smash burgess but at Union Kitchen prices.
California was awful.MarathonAg12 said:
I've never seen that type of line at any of my in and outs in central Texas
Sounds awful
Damn right!Microwave Onions said:
Teaching the elites at Rice, cooking vegan rap burgers...I thought Houston rap had reached its mainstream peak when every white girl in town had to wave her hands in the air for that one Fat Pat song they all know.
At least 50 cent kept it real-ish, affiliating with the working class kids at UH.
Gonna have to dial back to that real old school H-Town music that the sellouts and transplants don't know about
Don't waste your time with In N Out.DiskoTroop said:I was in California last week on business and decided to try In N Out just to quell the hype. I've not bothered to try one in the Houston area yet and since I was there on business with little better to do I figured I'd go find one and give it a shot.Bigballin said:
Waiting in line for a burger is in the same realm as waiting for bbq…not going to do it.
Likely a good burger but appears to be a lot of hype
60+ cars in the drive thru line.
Nope. Not gonna do it. Not waiting in a line like that for a burger.
BG Knocc Out said:
What is the point of this "smash burger" fad where you press it into a thin patty? Is it supposed to make it crispy? I am sure it's tasty but just want to understand why it looks like that.
Also, I'd be shocked if that burger stood up to Stanton's. Stanton's is the best I have had in a while...can't believe I used to live down the street and pass it all the time and never gave it a shot.
1. Thin patties cooked on a flat top are superior for a burger. You can't argue this.BG Knocc Out said:
What is the point of this "smash burger" fad where you press it into a thin patty? Is it supposed to make it crispy? I am sure it's tasty but just want to understand why it looks like that.
Also, I'd be shocked if that burger stood up to Stanton's. Stanton's is the best I have had in a while...can't believe I used to live down the street and pass it all the time and never gave it a shot.
schmellba99 said:1. Thin patties cooked on a flat top are superior for a burger. You can't argue this.BG Knocc Out said:
What is the point of this "smash burger" fad where you press it into a thin patty? Is it supposed to make it crispy? I am sure it's tasty but just want to understand why it looks like that.
Also, I'd be shocked if that burger stood up to Stanton's. Stanton's is the best I have had in a while...can't believe I used to live down the street and pass it all the time and never gave it a shot.
2. When you smash it, the fat stays with the patty versus rendering or dripping out like it does when you cook it on a grill - even a thin patty that is smashed is generally jucier than a thicker patty off of a grill.
3. Two thin patties smashed with melted cheese and whatever else is better than a single thick patty, in flavor, texture and juciness.
I was against the smash style for a long time - thought it was dumb and just a marketing thing. Then I got my blackstone and gave it a shot. It's better, hands down. It's also faster and easier. You can also do things like dice and grill some fresh japs, then smash the patty onto them (or onions if you want an Oklahoma style burger), or any number of different things. I honestly can't remember the last time I cooked a burger on the grill - even at deer camp we fire up the blackstone and don't even bother with the pit or grill when we have burgers.
Very interesting, I now want to try. But I do love a good medium to medium rare thick burger. The cheese burger at Port O Call in NOLA is a must for me every time I go down there. Plenty of fat gets trapped on the thick 80/20 burgers I make too. To each his own I guess. Seems almost like arguing NY Style vs Chicago style pizza..."why not both?"schmellba99 said:1. Thin patties cooked on a flat top are superior for a burger. You can't argue this.BG Knocc Out said:
What is the point of this "smash burger" fad where you press it into a thin patty? Is it supposed to make it crispy? I am sure it's tasty but just want to understand why it looks like that.
Also, I'd be shocked if that burger stood up to Stanton's. Stanton's is the best I have had in a while...can't believe I used to live down the street and pass it all the time and never gave it a shot.
2. When you smash it, the fat stays with the patty versus rendering or dripping out like it does when you cook it on a grill - even a thin patty that is smashed is generally jucier than a thicker patty off of a grill.
3. Two thin patties smashed with melted cheese and whatever else is better than a single thick patty, in flavor, texture and juciness.
I was against the smash style for a long time - thought it was dumb and just a marketing thing. Then I got my blackstone and gave it a shot. It's better, hands down. It's also faster and easier. You can also do things like dice and grill some fresh japs, then smash the patty onto them (or onions if you want an Oklahoma style burger), or any number of different things. I honestly can't remember the last time I cooked a burger on the grill - even at deer camp we fire up the blackstone and don't even bother with the pit or grill when we have burgers.