Three-Way High Street Double Cheeseburger Off

Threeway Burger Showdown

It was the 31st of December and having tasted some of the best burgers in London in 2011, I decided to cap off the year by tasting some of the worst. Two friends and I would compare and contrast double cheeseburgers from each of the major UK high street burger outlets.

An afternoon of Googling led me to conclude that the only place with a Burger King, a Wimpy and a McDonalds within easy reach of one another was Croydon. Familiar territory made the project easier to consider - I’d visited the area earlier in the year when a friend had purchased a flat days before the riots gave Croydon its very own facelift.

There were several caveats to the scientific nature of our taste test; we couldn’t be guaranteed completely fresh burgers from any of the venues; the burgers, however standardised, would be subject to some influence by the cooks and we would attempt to disregard any of our own personal preferences as best we could.

Burger King Double Cheeseburger

Cost: £3.29

Energy: 485kcal
Protein: 30g
Fat: 26g (of which saturated fat, 11g)

This suprised us all by not having a toasted bun. Maybe it usually does? The bun was much more cakey than the others and Dave insisted that the sesame seeds added something to it, but I expected to enjoy this a lot more than I did.

I can’t think why fast-food restaurants feel a slogan is necessary, let alone one that’s about as fresh as their food. I’m not overly fond of ‘Have it Your Way with its passive aggressive undertones, but it’s definitely better than McDonalds’ self-aggrandising ‘I’m Lovin’ It,’ or Wimpy’s trite attempt at life-coaching, ‘Enjoy Every Moment.’

McDonalds Double Cheeseburger

Cost: £1.39

Energy: 440kcal
Protein: 26g
Fat: 23g (of which saturated fat, 12g)

Easily the cheapest of our three and, as can be seen from the cut-through below, the shortest burger too. 

For me, the thin patties are a small price to pay for the inclusion of mustard and the iconic pickle flavour. The McDonalds burger is remarkable in that it has the same texture all the way through. You can almost inhale it.

The burger has a very soft, very sweet bun. It’s like a sweaty lukewarm dessert.

Wimpy Double Cheese Burger

Cost: £4.40

Energy: 593kcal
Protein: 39.3g
Fat: 34.6g (of which saturated fat, 16.7g)

Is Wimpy a fast food restaurant or a café? No-one knows - their menu lists a ridiculous range of food from toasted teacakes to fish and chips. They’ve all apparently had a recent refit but the decor still screams mid-1980s. It’s a strange and unusual place - people I’ve spoken to about it have been surprised that it’s actually still in existence.

Furthermore, not content with the innuendo overload of their Bender in a Bun, Wimpy’s signature dessert - the ‘Brown Derby’ - sounds suspiciously like a sex act; an opinion only reinforced when you notice that it’s cream and chocolate squirted into a ring doughnut.

There was no pickle in this, but it’s the only one of our three to include shredded lettuce and tomato. Wimpy were a bit stingy on the cheese too; just one slice, despite their website listing two. This was the most expensive burger of the trio and perhaps the staff realise it’s overpriced; when I went to pay at the end of the meal the waitress apologised for the cost.

Cut through

After individually rating the three burgers in order of preference, taking into account the cost, taste and texture, we totted up the scores to find that all three restaurants had scored exactly the same. What conclusions can we draw from this? Nothing. What had we accomplished in this endeavour? Nada. What have we learnt from this whole debacle? Zilch.

What an apt end to the year.

Top Ten London Burgers, 2011 Edition

Early in 2010 I got into burritos in a big way. Not the lazy messes pseudo-Mexican restaurants cover in sauce and serve on a plate with cutlery, but burritos presented San Francisco Mission style, freshly made to order from a huge variety of ingredients packed tightly into a tortilla and wrapped in foil as nature intended. With the depreciation of my sense of taste I have to rely more and more on textures to enjoy food and, from this perspective, the humble burrito is pretty much the perfect meal for me.

In my research into this fairly niche market I discovered a thriving community of people devoted to various cuisines, dishes and styles of cooking who all write eloquently and enthusiastically about their obsessions. There’s LondonBurrito with its oh-so-helpful Google Map I could use as a checklist; The Chili Foundry which is devoted to showcasing absurdly hot sauces and filming the (often unpleasant) results; and then there’s Young & Foodish.

Daniel Young is a food critic and has been involved in organising group visits to restaurants serving exemplary dishes, but perhaps he’s most well-known for his list of top ten burgers. At the beginning of the year I, along with five friends, attended a meat-up at Bar Boulud at the Mandarin Oriental. The burger I had there was one of the nicest things I’d ever put in my mouth and it was shortly afterwards that my friend Ian and I resolved that 2011 would be The Year of the Burger. Taking inspiration from Daniel’s list, we’d scour London burger outlets with the aim of creating our own top ten list.

For both cost and health reasons we tried to spread out the trips but with more and more places to visit there were a couple of times during the year where we had no choice but to cram in four or five burgers in successive days. One of these occasions happened to coincide with 11th November and so I duly termed it RememberMince Day. I wondered whether it could become an annual event where we paid tribute to the cows that had died for our burgers. It could be quite moo-ving.

We ended up dining at and rating a total of 23 restaurants together, but here’s our finalised top ten, and the date of most recent visitation:

  1. Hawksmoor, Seven Dials (July 26th)
  2. The Duke of Wellington, Marylebone (November 23rd)
  3. Bar Boulud, Knightsbridge (November 11th)
  4. Goodman, Mayfair (July 11th)
  5. The Admiral Codrington, South Kensington (June 30th)
  6. Honest Burgers, Brixton Village (November 11th)
  7. Bob Bob Ricard, Soho (September 20th)
  8. Lucky Chip, Netil Market (November 12th)
  9. Bread St. Kitchen, City (December 5th)
  10. The Meatwagon, Peckham (July 24th) 

It was a fantastic excuse to visit some of London’s finest restaurants, and I think we both have a lot more appreciation of what entails a decent burger, but my wallet and stomach have to both be thankful that the list is complete. Some burgers surprised us by simply being bad - the Harrods burger being terribly overcooked and bland, a burger from a highly-rated organic pub in Barnes being served in a supermarket bun - but I think the main eye-opener was discovering the London street food scene; exquisite dishes served by passionate individuals at an incredible price. Also they photograph a lot better than places with artificial light.

MeatWagon at the Peckham Rye


Lucky Chip's Sheen burger