Who’s the real burger king?
By Elliot Chan, Opinions Editor
When it comes to food, I find the burger to be the consistent favourite, one that seldom disappoints. Pick the burger on the menu and you know what you are going to get. It might never blow you away, but itâs also hard to mess up.
In this Flavour Feud, weâll look at four players in the fast food game, and see which burger stacks up best against the competitors.
A&Wâs Teen Burger: The initial bite had a generous serving of bread, crisp in my mouth, soft between my hands. As I made my way through the flavour landscape of the Teen Burger, I was filled with fluctuating emotions. Like a song that had a good beat but awful lyrics, the Teen Burger was great one bite and mediocre the next. This is because of the ingredients.
Nobody takes centre stage on the Teen Burger, all the ingredients share a unique spot and that is its downfall. One bite Iâll get the bacon, one bite Iâll get the lettuce, and one bite Iâll get the mustard.
While there is no spotlight on any individual ingredient, itâs not surprising that the bacon is the saviour, the hero. Sometimes I find that bacon can overwhelm a burger, but here it is perfect. Itâs subtle, doing its thing in the background.
However, the lettuce is lackluster and the mustardâwhenever put into a burgerâis a lame attempt. Itâs not a hotdog, after all. A bad supporting line-up of ingredients let the Teen Burger down.
4/5
McDonaldâs Big Mac: Long have I been a fan of the Big Mac. When I talk about consistency, Iâm thinking of the Big Mac. On this occasion, it was ready to impress. There is always a wild card when ordering fast food. One thing that can spoil the burger is the freshness. Feeling the warmth of the burger bun assured me that this experience would not be affected by the timeliness of the bite.
The Big Mac is a marshmallow of a burger. It is never âbig,â but as you eat it, it slowly compresses within your grip. Smaller and smaller, it gets. Thatâs not the only pattern that the Big Mac has: the flavour crescendos one bite after the next, until you reach the creamy middle. There is a lot of bun in the beginning, but as you reach the core, you cannot ignore the savoury goodness.
The sauce is what separates the Big Mac from any other burger in the world. It relies so heavily on it that I wonder what a Big Mac without the sauce would taste like. Probably very bland. The thing is, the sauce can elevate every burger on the menu, but it is reserved solely for the Big Mac. And that is why the Big Mac is still one of the most popular options on the menu. One criticism: Get rid of the middle slice of bread.
4.5/5
Burger Kingâs Whopper with Cheese: The Whopper with Cheese comes wrapped like a gift. And, like most gifts, there is sweetness to it. Warm and soft, the Whopper is so much more with the cheese. Itâs definitely worth it to have the premium.
Where the Whopper falters is with the construction of the burger. Take a bite and youâll notice the big crunch of the veggies, but the patty and the sauce are lost. The Whopper does not melt, it requires you to chew, chew, and chew. With the sauce at the top and the thick layer of ingredients in the way, you never truly taste the soul of the burger. Try eating it upside down.
The burger patty itself doesnât get a lot of love, which is ironic considering it is the Burger âKing.â Where it redeems itself is with the vegetables. They taste fresh, like actual vegetables in a market, which is high praise for a fast food restaurant. The onion, however, was a bit overwhelming.
Overall, the Whopper is filled with missed opportunities to highlight the key tastes you would expect from a burger.
3.5/5
Wendyâs Daveâs Single with Cheese: Held tightly within the trashy looking wrapper is the not-so-famous Daveâs Single with Cheese. Yes, even the name is less than impressive. Iâve driven 30 minutes to order a Baconator from Wendyâs, but I would not go out of my way for the Daveâs Single with Cheese.
While the Baconator is in another league, the Daveâs Single with Cheese is barely even playing the same sport when compared with the other burgers on this list. It is cafeteria food at worst and a McDonaldâs hamburger at best. While eating this burger, I canât help feel that we have overpaid for itâthe same feeling I get when buying food at a movie theatre.
So what qualities harmed the Daveâs Single with Cheese the most? First, letâs talk about the bun. Itâs uninspiring and almost insulting. Without any sesame, the bun feels fake in my hand, as if Iâm holding a prop. Secondly, the sauce is boring. What is it? Ketchup. Lastly, the square burger patty is gimmicky and tasted as though it might have past its prime.
Good thing Wendyâs is not relying on the Daveâs Single with Cheese as its sole attraction. Itâs a lazy burger, one that I can make at home with a frying panâand Iâm not a good cook.
1.5/5
Elliotâs rankings:
- Big Mac
- Teen Burger
- Whopper with cheese
- Daveâs Single with Cheese
By Eric Wilkins, Editor-in-Chief
A&Wâs Teen Burger: This was the burger of my childhood. Iâm not sure I even set foot in a Burger King or Wendyâs until high school, and my mother had a bad experience with McDonaldâs meat growing upâŚamusingly meaning the rest of us were restricted to their chicken and fish offerings as well. Clearly a bullet dodged.
This was probably my first Teen Burger since I was actually a teen, and itâs still fantastic. âGoodâ fast food is a bit of a crapshootâit takes a bit of luck. If you get stuck with a smaller tomato slice or onion, the cheese isnât centred to melt properly on the patty, or the employee was generally a little sloppy in creating your solidified grease, itâs quite possible to go from a good burger to a disappointing one. I got lucky in this case. First bite had it all. Tomato, lettuce, bacon, onion, pickles, cheese, ketchup, mustard, and teen sauce. Scrumptious goodness.
4/5
McDonaldâs Big Mac: The Big Mac is the definition of a flagship burger and itâs so wonderfully iconic that most everyone immediately knows what it is. You can hold up any other burger and have some confusion, but not the Big Mac. You know itâs the Big Mac. Two buns, two patties, lettuce, pickles, onion, special sauce, and the all-important bread in the middle. Thing of beauty.
The day I had a Big Mac for the first time was the moment I realized there was more to life than five value picks for under $10. It didnât disappoint then and it never has. The key here is, of course, the bread in the middle. Part of the problem with burgers is that itâs very difficult to get every part of the burger in every bite; the Big Mac solves this. Whether partially as a placebo or actually backed up by heavily funded and biased fast-food science, the middle serves to soak up all the flavours and present them in one delicious mouthful after another. Iâd probably be more than happy to just eat a bunch of middles with nothing else. Probably.
4.5/5
Burger Kingâs Whopper with Cheese: My first experience with the Whopper came last year when I was working at a Starbucks right beside a Burger King. It was love at first bite then and it hasnât changed since. Easily one of the heftiest burgers around; it sits so solidly in your hand that you could swear thereâs some invisible ingredient in there weighing it down. But there isnât. Itâs just a real burger. Giant juicy patty, adequate support ingredients, and quality thick wrapping. And while you can eat more than one, thereâs no need to unless you really want to. Itâs like the Gatorade of burgers: hunger quencher. Get it on Whopper Wednesday for $3 ($3.50 with cheese) and itâs the best value out there.
4/5
Wendyâs Daveâs Single with Cheese: When I first picked up the burger I assumed the apostrophe following âDaveâ was to show ownership. Whose single with cheese is that? Daveâs. However, halfway through my first bite I realized my mistake. The apostrophe is for a contraction. This offering is so bad that itâs resulted in the bachelorhood of poor Dave. Dave is single with cheese. What an absolutely garbage excuse for a burger. One of the precious few times Iâve been unwilling to finish.
Starting with the presentation, things were already going downhill: an overbearingly shiny foil wrap with metallic red printâfood attire so offensive to the eye it even looks like itâd get kicked out of even the most desperate of nightclubs. The bun was tasteless and thick, the patty had a weird taste to it, and the rest of the ingredientsâwhile mediocre enough to pass in any other burgerâsure werenât even remotely good enough to salvage the barely edible performance. The meat at Wendyâs, and thus, in a Daveâs Single with Cheese, may be fresh, never frozen, but if this were a prizefight, that burger would be out cold.
1/5
Ericâs rankings:
- Big Mac
- Whopper with cheese
- Teen Burger
- Daveâs Single with Cheese