Posted on 01/01/2011 12:10:18 PM PST by wizkid
Welcome to my search for the perfect burger. My mission is to search and inform one burger at a time.
(Excerpt) Read more at joesburgersearch.com ...
one= own
The 7th best burger in America according to GQ magazine
Dusk is falling on the western town at the very edge of the parched plains. Fewer than a dozen buildings line the dusty main street. Howling winds impel tumbleweeds forward with no regard for obstacles in their path. Even though neither of the protagonists has uttered the old western cliché this town aint big enough for the two of us, the scene is always ripe for a confrontation between the two long-time rivals. You can cut the tension with a knife and fork and it would be utterly delicious.
This confrontation isnt between the black-hearted, black hat wearing villain of western lore and his rival, the clean-cut, white chapeaued cowboy.
Its a rivalry between the Owl Cafe and Mannys Buckhorn Tavern, two heralded hamburger havens separated by less than a block yet inextricably bound by national publications which champion them as among the best of their genre (in westerns, this would be the fastest guns in the west). The Owl Cafe is among the most celebrated restaurants in New Mexico, touted for its incomparable green chile cheeseburger. In 2003, Jane and Michael Stern, rated the Owls green chile cheeseburger on Epicurious.Com as one of the top ten burgers in America. GQ magazine may have done one better, in 2005 naming Mannys Buckhorn Tavern the seventh best burger in America. Alan Richman who authored the article trumpeted the Buckhorn Burger as the ultimate in a burger with a burn, adding that the Buckhorn makes the best green-chili cheeseburgers in a tiny town devoted to little else. Not to be outdone, in 2009, Marlboro.coms Nightlife Flavor Roundup named Mannys green chile cheeseburger number three baddest burger in the land. Confrontation has become commonplace in San Antonioand not just between the most prolific purveyors of burgers in town. On May 14th, 2009 bad boy Bobby Flay, one of the worlds preeminent grill masters and a celebrated Food Network glitterati made his way, camera crew in tow, to challenge Mannys proprietor Bobby Olguin, not to an old west style draw, but to a green chile cheeseburger throwdown. The concept of his show Throwdown With Bobby Flay is based on Flay challenging chefs from throughout the fruited plain to prepare the specialty for which they are known and to have judges decide which is tastier. The episode aired for the first time on July 22nd, 2009.
The Owl Cafe and Mannys Buckhorn Tavern have proven over the years that there is more than enough room in San Antonio, New Mexico for two outstanding practitioners (three if you count Bobby Flay) of the fine culinary art of crafting among the very best green chile cheeseburgers in the universe. The chile (though spelled chili Texas style) at Mannys is unmistakably New Mexican with a piquant bite that makes your lips tingle. Ironically, its not exclusively green chile grown within easy walking distance in San Antonios famous Sichler Farms, but a special blend of chile from Bueno Chile combined with chile from Sichler Farms and Rosales Chile. The reason given (and it makes sense) is that Bueno Chile is already roasted, peeled, chopped and sealed for freshness.
The Buckhorn Burger, brought to your table cut in half, is a stout, fresh and lean ground chunk of beef dressed with the requisite green chile, cheese, lettuce, pickles, chopped onions, tomatoes and mustard. It is a huge burger, easily big enough to share though you wont want to. The beef used is 70 percent lean and 30 percent fat to give it a flavor as big as the stars that decorate night sky above the burger blessed town of San Antonio. The meat is pressed under a dinner plate, a family tradition that accounts for each burgers uniformity.
Ingredients are unfailingly fresh as each burger is plucked off the grill at the optimum time with cheese melted to the point that it drapes itself over the beef without any residual oiliness. The Buckhorn Tavern uses only American cheese on their green chile cheeseburger and it drapes the cheese over chopped red onions. The beef is seasoned with granulated garlic, a little touch that imparts a surprising amount of flavor without the sometimes overwhelming pungency of garlic. The flavor combinations will make your mouth sing.
Every ingredient complements the green chile which most burger aficionados say is every bit the equal of the one served at the world-famous Owl Cafe, if not better. As the restaurants affable proprietor Bob Olguin put it so succinctly on the Throwdown With Bobby Flay episode, the green chile cheeseburger should taste like going to heaven or being married to somebody that you love and want to be with the rest of your life. Its just indescribable. In between utterances of appreciation, the Food Network judges actually did describe the burgers very well. Rating the green chile cheeseburgers on three criteriagreen chile flavor, authenticity and overall tastethe judges praised the combination of heat and flavor on Olguins entry. One judge found the green chile so hot he had to wipe his brow. In the final judges tabulation, Olguins burger reigned supreme, but the real winner was the Land of Enchantment which Flay praised effusively.
In recognition of Olguins victory, Governor Bill Richardson declared Friday July 24, 2009 Buckhorn Tavern Day. Congratulations to the Buckhorn Tavern and its owner Bobby Olguin for the impressive victory over one of the worlds most recognized chefs, Governor Richardson said. Through his win,Mr. Olguin did an excellent job of showcasing one of New Mexicos culinary treasures, the green chile cheeseburger.
more:
http://nmgastronome.com/blog/?p=164
But the old root beer doesn’t exist anymore since sassafras was banned for root beer by the FDA. Number-one law to overturn in 2011.
Best hamburger or cheeseburger in New York is at the Flame, 58th Street and Ninth Avenue, because it is really charcoal-broiled—illegal in NYC except for those that are grandfathered in like the Flame. It’s not big and it’s not fancy. It just reminds me of the cheeseburgers I had in NJ as a kid/teenager.
At 83rd and Lex I usually get liverwurst on toast—can’t hardly get a liverwurst sandwich anymore without buying the stuff at a supermarket and then having way too much of it. That place has lime rickeys too—remember them?
Did you come to Arthur’s with the Tri-State freepers?
Did you come to Arthur’s with the Tri-State freepers?
me. Seeing all those burgers, made me hungry.
ML/NJ
I checked and the pictures appear viewable. You just cannot go to FLICKR and view them directly.
You are right about using another site like photobucket next time.
While I can change change the photo status to public, to allow people to view these photos on flickr, one must have a flickr/yahoo account to view them.
I do, aamof. Still haven't tried an egg cream yet, though.
When I was a kid, They put a place up called FudRuckers. They made great burgers; that was in CA. Does anyone have any good recipes?
All I know, is that looking at those pictures on this thread makes me hungry for hamburgers.
I think it was in 2002. The New Yorkers came over on the ferry and we went to Arthur’s, Sinatra’s house, and then Maxwell’s (?) for dessert and coffee. I think you started joining us when Hillary’s book came out.
They don't use artificials dyes or colors even in their photography..
http://www.lotaburger.com/pg_location.html
BTW, They have a killa' vanilla milkshake as well.
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