Friday, September 19, 2008

Wall Street Burger Shoppe: Bringing the kool back to old skool

What we love: Shoppe Singles for $4, braised pork belly, and our token vegetarian reports the mushroom burger was delicious.

What we could live without: The Shoppe Singles are $3 more upstairs than they are downstairs.

Burger scale: A

Price range: $$$ out of $$$$ upstairs, $ out of $$$$ downstairs.

Payment method: cash, major credit card

Kudos to the Wall Street Burger Shoppe (WSBS) for opening a retro burger joint in a neighborhood that becomes a ghost town after dark. The Financial District needs more places like the WSBS.

Co owned by the same guy who started Pop Burger, the WSBS brings back retro in two ways. The downstairs part of the restaurant is a vintage Philly diner with vinyl topped stools and formica countertops. The Bar Room upstairs is a nod to classic New York gangster movies, complete with a wood bar that could have easily come from the set of the Untouchables. We sat upstairs and ordered from the Bar Menu.


The WSBS gets their Hereford beef from Ottamanelli & Sons on Bleecker, and it certainly tastes like quality beef. Our Bar Room Burger had a nice char on the outside and was tender and a perfect medium rare on the inside. It came on a sesame bun and was topped with gruyere, sauteed mushrooms, onions and braised pork belly. The pork belly seemed an odd choice, but we liked the complexities it added to our burger. Despite its heaviness, it gave our burger a slightly different texture, saltiness and flavor than a standard bacon cheeseburger and made our burger interesting in ways that makes us want to go back and have it again.

For more pictures of our visit to The Wall Street Burger Shoppe, go to the album.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Burger Series 13: The Wall Street Burger Shoppe

Goodbye summer, hello fall!

We meet at the Wall Street Burger Shoppe this month. Its burger made NY Magazine's 2008 Cheap Eats list:

"In a space done up like Nate's Peach Pit from Beverly Hills, 90210, hordes of bonus-starved stock touts take refuge in old-fashioned four-ounce cheeseburgers adorned with nothing more than lettuce and the house special sauce for just $4 a pop."


Although if you're dying to splurge, the WSBS is also home to NYC's most expensive burger. For $175, you can treat yourself to a "Kobe beef patty, lots of black truffles, seared foie gras, aged Gruyere cheese, wild mushrooms and flecks of gold leaf on a brioche bun."

To get to the WSBS, take the 1 to South Ferry, the 2,3 to Wall Street, the 4,5 to Bowling Green, or the N,R,W to Whitehall / South Ferry. The restaurant is on Water Street right after Broad Street.

Can't wait to see you there!

Monday, August 25, 2008

Hot diggity dawg!

More reasons to love hot dogs!
(Photo: Adam Levey)
NY Magazine's R & R food critics do some research to find hot dogs that are "delicious, environmentally correct, possibly organic, and maybe even homegrown, and that won’t traumatize the natural-casing-and-nitrite-loving tube-steak lunatics at your Labor Day cookout this year."

read more digg story

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

The End of Borough Food and Drink

The ill-fated Borough Food and Drink will be replaced by a French-influenced American bistro, reports Gael Greene on Insatiable Critic. The restaurant faltered early and last year saw its management taken over by Zak Pelaccio and his business partner, Rick Camac.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Blue Smoke: We'd eat here every day if we could

What we love: The food and the service.

What we could live without: We couldn't. We love Blue Smoke. We'd be devestated if we couldn't go back.

Burger scale: A+

Price range: $$$ out of $$$$ but worth every penny

Payment method: cash, major credit card

We can count on our itsy bitsy hand the few times all the members of the Burger Series have unanimously shared the same view on a burger joint. Blue Smoke happens to be one of those few places, and the group consensus is that the place is damn good! There is nothing we'd wish Blue Smoke would do differently.

The restaurant was a little late seating us for our reservation, so they kindly comped us a few unexpected appetizers, all of which were excellent.

Meat plate (duh)


Wings and Cajun Shrimp (awesomely delicious)


Since Blue Smoke is a barbecue place, not everyone sampled the burgers. Regardless of whether we had burgers or ribs or pulled pork, no one wanted to share because their entrees were too good.

Ribs


Pulled Pork


Cheeseburgers (that'll melt in your mouth)


We'd also like to put in a plug for our amazing wait staff as well. They were gracious, attentive and friendly. We had tons of fun at Blue Smoke. For more pictures of the awesome time we had there, go to the album.

Monday, July 21, 2008

NY Magazine's 2008 Cheap Eats List

Yay! New York Magazine's Cheap Eats List is out for 2008. We'd like to point your attention to the following:

Dram Shop Bar
(Photo: Ben Stechschulte)

The Burger Correction

One good thing about a crumbling economy: cheaper burgers. No one really knows why. One theory holds that prior to a burger-correction period like the one we’re in right now, some sort of culinary-regulatory-group intervention secretly takes place, and the so-called innovators of the burger-boom years—the $29-burger barons and their ilk—are taken away during the night like Bear Stearns employees and sent off to a hamburger rehab facility. Once there, through tough love and arts-and-crafts workshops, they’re cured of their perverse desire to top hamburgers with all manner of luxury ingredients including foie gras, truffles, quail eggs, beluga caviar, French songbirds, diamond necklaces, and $100 bills.

The result is a rash of new burger joints whose names alone signal a return to sound burger economics, like the Wall Street Burger Shoppe (30 Water St.; 212-425-1000), for instance, which opened in the financial district earlier this year. Here, in a space done up like Nat’s Peach Pit from Beverly Hills, 90210, hordes of bonus-starved stock touts take refuge in old-fashioned four-ounce cheeseburgers adorned with nothing more than lettuce and the house special sauce for just $4 a pop.

An equally good deal can be found on Sunday nights at The Smith (55 Third Ave.; 212-420-9800) in the East Village. Bargain-hunting pleasure seekers both young and old begin arriving here in droves around 5:30 p.m. for the $12 draft-beer-and-burger special. And who can blame them? The plat du jour is a bulging half-pound bacon cheeseburger just barely contained by its bun, much in the manner that the Incredible Hulk often finds himself just barely contained by his Fruit of the Looms. This Hulklike beef bomb doesn’t actually turn green and rumble around angrily on the plate, but it does come with a mountain of pretty good fries included in the price.

Alphabet City is where you’ll find the U.G.’s favorite new mini-burgers, at the breezy, spacious eight-month-old burger bar Zaitzeff (18 Ave. B; 212-477-7137), an outpost of the financial-district burger joint of the same name. The mini-burgers, a brand-new addition to an already stellar full-size-hamburger menu, come three to an order for $12 and are simply superb—plump and juicy and topped with sharp Cheddar and fried onions. The grass-fed sirloin that the brothers Zaitzeff use to make their patties is fresh and flavorful, but the key to these delectable Scooby Snacks is the miniature toasted Portuguese muffins they get from a bakery in Fall River, Massachusetts. These slightly sweet super-buns combine the sturdiness of an English muffin with the burger-melding ability of a delicate brioche and have made the Underground Gourmet reconsider a preference for the squishy supermarket variety.

One of our all-time favorite cheeseburgers is the one Ryan Skeen, working like a culinarily inclined Dr. Frankenstein, concocted from a mix of beef cheek, hanger steak, and pork fatback and unleashed at Resto a while back. Skeen has moved on, but it seems that you can’t keep a good burger-man down. We spied him recently looking tanned and fit while expediting dinner orders in his flip-flops at the recently opened Brooklyn restaurant The General Greene (229 Dekalb Ave., Ft. Greene; 718-222-1510), where he consults on his friend Nicholas Morgenstern’s terrific menu. As you might have guessed, there’s an excellent six-ounce char-grilled burger here ($11), and in keeping with the back-to-burger-basics trend, it’s made wholly from freshly ground Angus sirloin.

Sometimes you have to suffer for your art, even if your art is eating hamburgers and then scribbling your impressions on the back of a paper napkin. Take, for instance, the recent visit the U.G. paid to the Dram Shop Bar (339 9th St., Park Slope; 718-788-1444), a beer-soaked romper room of sorts with a pool table, a shuffleboard, and a crowd of drunken revelers so loud we could barely hear ourselves think, let alone focus on burger chomping and napkin scribbling. No matter. The toothsome burgers here remain permanently etched in our minds. The house style is to shove two three-ounce, square-shaped patties—loosely packed and nicely browned on the griddle—into one round sesame-seed bun, the same way Dram Shop partner Clay Mallow’s father and his father before him used to do it back at the old grocery store in South Dallas. The result, a well-proportioned double burger abundantly accessorized with two slices of American cheese, lettuce, tomato, onion, pickle, mustard, and mayo, will run you $9. Included in the price are thick hand-cut fries and a ringing in your ears that lasts for days.

Finally, if you ever find yourself adrift in the wilds of Greenwich, Connecticut, take Exit 2 off I-95, turn left on Byram Shore Road, and then follow the unmistakable scent of sizzling beef-burgers to 302 Delavan Avenue. That is where you’ll find the ten-month-old Burgers, Shakes & Fries (203-531-7433) and where you can get a deliciously drippy one-third-pound cheeseburger simply fashioned from good old ground chuck. It comes on griddle-toasted white bread and goes for the bargain price of $3.77, which, of course, is less than the price of a gallon of gas these days.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Burger Series 12: Blue Smoke

Happy Independence month!!!


We meet at Blue Smoke this month.



Its burger made Rob Patronite's Best Burgers of 2007 list:


"A borderline bourgeois burger with bar-burger soul, Blue Smoke's $11.50 patty is served on a brioche bun, but you can get it with American cheese and house-made bacon."


Yummy!


Can't wait to see you there!

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Spikey Pops? Pops Spiked?

Call it what you like, but this sounds good. Especially when it's this hot out.

read more digg story

Nothing against freezer pops, but isn’t it time that the most simple of summer treats—the Popsicle—got an upgrade? We asked an Iron Chef, a barbecue guru, a top barman, and a pastry classicist to create recipes for portable coolants. Hint: It’s easier to spike a frozen sweet when you’re making it yourself.


Watermelon Agua Fresca
Elizabeth Karmel, executive chef, Hill Country
“Fresh water” fruit drinks are served all over Mexico, but when Karmel had trouble finding proper agua fresca in New York, she decided to make some herself. The key is to strain the pulpy fruit to make a clear liquid. Here, St. Germain liqueur adds some depth to the sweet watermelon flavor.


Gin-and-Chile-Infused Grapefruit
Eben Freeman, mixologist, Tailor
A spiced-up version of a greyhound cocktail (gin and grapefruit juice, classically); Freeman nicknames this pop the “Hot Dog.” As your mouth turns cold, you’re bombarded with that most elusive of taste sensations: citrusy icy-hotness.


Wasabi
Masaharu Morimoto, chef and partner, Morimoto
The Iron Chef alum serves this sinus-assaulting sorbet as a palate-cleanser on the omakase menu at Morimoto. Fresh wasabi, the chef insists, is less spicy and has a richer flavor than the powder. The Popsicle can also be served after a meal as a tangy dessert.


Apricot-Raspberry Creamsicle With Cookie Dough
Sebastien Rouxel, executive pastry chef, Thomas Keller Restaurants
This combo reminds Rouxel of the “coupe glacée”—usually two flavors of ice cream or sorbet, finished with a fruit purée, nuts, and whipped cream—he enjoyed as a kid in France. You can add more texture by dipping your Creamsicle in white chocolate followed by a roll in butter-cookie crumbs.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Borough Food & Drink: Boring us with one overly loud technopop song after another

What we love: The concept if it were executed well, the fries which are almost as good as McDonald's.

What we could live without: Poor execution of the concept, the prices, music so loud and acoustics so bad you can't talk to the person next to you, the extremely strict reservation policy when the restaurant is half empty, inefficient restaurant layout

Burger scale: B-

Price range: $$$ out of $$$$

Payment method: cash, major credit cards

We love the idea of a locavore restaurant dedicated to products and food found primarily in the five boroughs. Unfortunately, Borough Food and Drink wasn't the restaurant we were thinking of.

Despite the restaurant's attempts to feel authentically local -- a deli counter and dining room shelves stocked with local foodstuffs from Little Italy, the Pickle Guys and Chinatown, all for sale -- it somehow misses the mark. It feels very much like a suburban chain restaurant trying very hard to create kitsch that it believes represents the Five Boroughs.

Maybe it was the space. The restaurant space was H U G E. A long and awkward expanse of hardwood floors, reclaimed wood finishes and exposed brick. One third the length of the restaurant was partitioned into a bar which was spilling over with a young sceney flatiron crowd. The other two thirds of the cavernous restaurant, separated from the bar by a banister or a low wrought iron fence (our memory fails us at present as we are neither young or sceney), was the sit down and eat portion. The proportions were wrong. There were too many people at the bar, and not enough at the restaurant. The space was echoey. It just wasn't conducive to sit down eatness. What? We can't hear you. Can you repeat that again - gain - ain - in - n?

Then again, maybe it was our experience with the service. We made our reservation the previous week, and the restaurant had stressed that our entire party arrive before we would be seated. When a few of us were running a few minutes behind, we were told to sit in a small crowded waiting area near the hostess station, which gave us the impression that the restaurant was busy and packed. Once everyone showed, the hostess took us to the back of the restaurant, which was EMPTY. Which is why we couldn't figure out why our server was nowhere to be seen for much of the night, why our food took so long to arrive, and why our hostess thought it wise to seat us at a long table right next to the aforementioned rail that separated the extremely crowded and noisy bar from the dining room. It made it hard for us to have any conversation over dinner.

Or, it could have been the terribly loud music. We don't know about you, but we like our dinner music to be at slightly below conversation volume so we can speak to the people at our table but not have to hear the people at the table next to us. Borough Food and Drink's interpretation of dining music was deafening house or trance music. Perfect music for a bar or lounge, but not so great for dinner.

All this, and we've yet to discuss burgers!

The cheeseburger in question, a 10oz house blended beef burger on a seeded white bun with heirloom tomatoes, lettuce, onion, caper aioli and a choice of local NY cheeses, was decently inoffensive. For $15 a burger ($17 if you add bacon), we expect more than decent and inoffensive and a side of shoe string fries. (The fries were quite good.) We expect burgers that are at least good if not better than good. If we want an "okay" burger, we'd go to our neighborhood Applebee's. The burgers might not be plated as well as the burgers at Borough Food and Drink, but they'd taste the same nonetheless.

We don't know if we just happened to arrive at a night where the service, the music and the food just happened to be slightly off, or if our experience summed up Borough Food and Drink on most nights. From what we can tell, the place caters more to people who go to socialize and drink, not to people who go to socialize and eat. We won't be back to try our luck again.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Burger Series 11: Borough Food & Drink

Happy Summer!

We meet at Borough Food and Drink this month.


Photo by Ben Stechschulte


A typical cheesy-themey Jeffrey Chodorow production, NY Magazine claims the burgers are worth a try:

"A toothsome ten-ouncer, which your waiter will gleefully announce, is fashioned from a 70-30 lean-to-fat ratio, and listed under the daily specials, there's a "cheeses for your burger" section."

We can't wait to see you there!

Monday, June 2, 2008

NYC's Best Breakfasts

New York Magazine's food critics give us the city’s best morning meals in twenty categories.

read more

Friday, May 23, 2008

Island Burgers and Shakes: Options galore!

What we love: The milkshakes, the malteds, the BYOB! The number of burger or chicken sandwich topping and bun options.

What we could live without: Uh, we kinda wanted fries with that. The overwhelmingness of the number of burger or chicken sandwich topping and bun options.

Burger scale: A-

Price range: $$ out of $$$$

Payment method: cash, major credit cards

When we heard we were going to a place called Island Burgers and Shakes, we suspected the place would be decorated with surf paraphernalia. We were right.

We didn't think the place would also be the size of a Tahitian Motu, but it was. The size suits the vibe of the place: low key casual eats made with fresh quality deets.

Since the place unabashedly calls itself a burger and shake joint, before we could contemplate burgers, we had to first try the shakes. They were magnifique. (We don't know if we're allowed to use snooty French adjectives to describe milkshakes, but that was the word that popped into the taste bud part of our brain in big flashing marquee lights.)

As for the burgers, solid is as good an adjective as it gets. The ingredients were fresh and high end, but we won't say these were the best burgers we've ever tasted. As much as we love freedom of choice and America and apple pie, 63 burger toppings and the 6 bun combinations felt gimmicky and detracted from the very thing we were there for. Da burgers.

Remove the toppings, and the hefty half pound patties were pretty. They had a nice char on the outside and a beautiful red juicy inside (we like our burgers on the medium, slightly rare side). Sadly, what they had in looks, they lacked in taste. They were underseasoned. Naked, the burgers bordered on almost flavorless. With their clothes (ahem, toppings), they made for a decent party in our mouths, albeit of the polite dinner sort with guests that sit still, sip wine and talk about the stock market.

We're glad we went to Island Burgers and Shakes. We like the concept. While we probably won't make a special trip to Hell's Kitchen just for the food, if we're ever in the area and have a hankering for a shake and burger, we'd stop in.

Although next time, we may try our luck with a churrasco. Our token bird sampler reported her chicken, onion, mushroom, peppers on ciabatta was tasty and done to perfection.

For more pictures, click here.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Burger Series 10: Island Burgers and Shakes

Got Spring Fever?

Take a break from the office and come dine with us at Island Burgers and Shakes, the Hell's Kitchen burger joint with a SoCo vibe. If we can't actually be in sunny Southern California, we might as well pretend we're there!

Photo by Shanna Ravindra



Island Burgers manages to do the burger restaurant impossible and garner rave reviews for both its burgers and churascos (aka grilled chicken sandwiches to us right-coasters). NYMag recommends we try either the Blackened Churasco, the Bourbon Street Burger or the Hippo Burger. With 63 burger or chicken (a churger? a bhicken?) combinations to choose from, there'll be something for even the most finicky of carnivores.

P.S. Island Burgers is BYOB! If you don't feel like BYO, we hear their shakes and floats are pretty darn good too.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Shake Shack: a Laka Boom Boom

What we love: The weather. We don't know if we love anything about Shake Shack though. The line was too long!

What we could live without: The line.

Burger scale: NA

Price range: $ out of $$$$

Payment method: cash, all major credit cards

Ok, we have to confess the nice weather made us a little too optimistic. And psychic. We knew exactly what the rest of Manhattan was thinking when we came up with the harebrain idea of going to the Shake Shack because the rest of Manhattan was in line before us! We should have probably thought to check the Shack Shack Cam, but we didn't. Oops.

By the time we arrived at Madison Square Park, the line for burgers at the Shake Shack had wrapped all the way around the block. We were hungry, so we scrapped our plans and headed to nearby pub Stone Creek.

Many thanks to the proprieters of Stone Creek for being flexible enough to accomodate us at the last minute. The pub has a great neighborhood feel, and we appreciate the service, attention, drinks and food.

Stone Creek is located at 140 E 27th Street. To get there, take the 6 to 28th Street and walk east.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Burger Series 9: Shake Shack

The weather's been so lovely, let's burger at the Shake Shack in Madison Square Park this month!

If you're the first person to arrive in Madison Square Park for the Burger Series, be on a lookout for an available table.