Rick's b.log - 2019/01/06 |
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It is the 18th of December 2024 You are 3.15.145.111, pleased to meet you! |
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Unfortunately our closest that isn't in the middle of city traffic appars to be in Ancenis, which isn't exactly close. But, okay, it's a change.
The first thing to notice is that you can still order from an actual person if you like. Or you can use a prod-screen terminal. I chose the terminal as it would lay out all of the options. The terminal can speak French and English ("nobody's perfect", it says).
The organisation of the ordering is a bit messy. Like McDonalds, there are categories on the left, work area for most of the screen, and usefully a running receipt on the right. However there are many burgers and many meal options, so it can be a bit hard to work out what you want. Scrolling up an down the list can 'add' things to your order as it registers a tap rather than a scroll.
Now here's the mind-blowing part. The customisations. I recall back in England in the '80s BK did the whole "your burger your way" thing, and they're still doing this today. About the only thing you cannot do is change the bun your burger comes in. And while McDonalds also offers customisation options, they are mainly about leaving stuff off the burger (in case you don't like tomatoes, say). Not so with Burger King. They let you choose what sauces to use, plus the options are for less and more. So I could knock off tomatoes and add extra lettuce. Not only that, but for a small additional fee, extra burger (€1) and extra cheese (€0,40) are also possible.
All rolled together, the meal came to €13,90. Or an exactly round €12 without the onion rings as extra. This is actually cheaper than McDo's premium "Signature" meals.
Here's the receipt:
Well, okay, so I asked for a burger with a ridiculous pile of stuff in it. They prepared it in a mere few minutes and presented me with a ridiculously large burger. I mean, this:
I'm really really happy with whoever decided that the crunchy onion bits go on top. I could take the lid off, flip it over, and enjoy the top of the roll with onion bits smothered in mayo. Absolutely sublime. I must make a confession here, I eat burgers with a knife and fork. I ask, and they (BK and McDo both) give me a plastic set usually used with salads. I don't like picking them up and shoving them in my gob, it just seems... I don't know... distasteful. Besides, how can one eat a burger like that pictured above without bits falling out?
The King Fries were... less exciting. Here's a picture:
Normal chips in a box, served hot (another thing the other place tends not to get right). On top of this was squirted what I can only describe as liquid Kraft slice. And finally some cut bacon dropped on top. But the main issue was whatever was pretending to be the cheese.
Then there's this:
In summary, I'm not sure whether Burger King has broken McDonalds for me, or fixed it. Suffice to say that if it's a choice between the crown or the clown... let's just leave clowns where they belong - in Stephen King novels...
Yup. Snails. As a microwavable ready meal, without palm oil (whoo!).
Okay, that's it. I've now seen everything.
Burger King
Having grown disenchanted with KFC (everything downsized except the price), and fed up with McDonalds (fewer specials, so it's always the same sort of things), we decided to try Burger King. The home of the flame grilled Whopper, etc etc.
I choose a Double Steakhouse which was €0,10 more expensive than the Double Whopper. To be honest they looked alike, the main difference here being that the steakhouse was on a bread bun with corn bits rather than the generic sesame seed bun. What might be an idea here is for Burger King to have some sort of icon to tap on so that if you don't happen to know the products inside out, it'll tell you the attributes of each. I mean, let's just say there's a "Chicken Surfer Dude" released in the summer. The picture is chicken, bun, lettuce, etc etc and a green sauce. Two immediate questions: is that chicken as in a processed nugget or as in a breaded filet, and is that green sauce avocado or pesto or...? It's a hypothetical burger, but the point remains, some descriptions might be useful.
With the burger I tried the current special of "cheese and bacon lover" special King Fries and a cherry coke (no ice cubes, it's flippin' January!). And a pack of six onion rings. Onion rings are good. I could live on onion rings. Okay, I'd die of heart failure in a few years, but they'd be enjoyable years filled with many onion rings. ☺
The default sauces were BBQ and mayo which suited me fine, so I left those and just added extra of everything else. I could have sworn I added extra pickle and onion, but they didn't show up (nor are on the receipt). Maybe the kiosk only allows a certain number of extras to stop people like me doing things like this? Still, I added crunchy onion and got it, so that was good.
So, next job is to deal with the veg and the bacon bits. Then, on to the meat. Three patties, stuck together with cheese slices. The meat had a really nice taste and was juicy - two things that rarely happen "chez le competition".
Still, nothing ventured nothing gained. I'll stick with normal chips in the future. I'm not that upset because, let's face it, that burger was bloody massive and I wasn't terribly hungry by this point. I put them in a paper bag to take home...
I have now seen everything
The Christmas tree
It's now time to make the tree look like a regular tree and forget about Christmas for another eleven months (or at least eight, given the way shops bring out the Christmas stuff before the Halloween stuff these days).
So one last photo. This was taken with my phone (an S7) in long exposure mode.
GAVIN WRAITH, 7th January 2019, 12:32 Happy New Year. I am afraid your descriptions of burgers make my gorge rise. Only once in my life have I bought a hamburger, from a little place in a back street in Brighton, to which I was recommended. Otherwise I only eat those I cook for myself, typically the Danish carbonade, a burger made of veal. For reasons that probably require a Freud to explain, I hate sauces of any kind: mayonnaise, dressing, gravy, vinegar, cheese, custard, creme fraiche, ... they all revolt me.I prefer my food dry, solid and separate. No glurk, no gloop. Eating out is an ordeal. My wife dies of shame if I attempt to explain my hang ups. So apologies if I air them here. I got dirty looks in a restaurant in Paris once when I complained that the meat was not cooked. It should be black on the outside, I explained - carbonise'. Do not get me wrong - I love food, it just has to be prepared my way. Anyway, all the best for 2019.J.G.Harston, 10th March 2019, 04:16 I grew up, went to university, and lived in Hong Kong with MacDonald's. A few years after returning to the UK a Burger King opened, and I wondered where they'd ever been in my life. Their food actually tastes like food, their bread has the texture of bread, not the molded polystyrene used in MacD's. When working away from home I check beforehand which service stations have a BK on my route and plan my travel around them. Plus, my AA membership gives me a discount. :)
I'm currently trying to persuade them to allow ice cream to be allowable as a drink in the "burger, fries and drink" discount combo. In the middle of summer I'd much prefer an ice cream than a drink.J.G.Harston, 10th March 2019, 04:18 Gavin: yes, I've been known to cry out "this meat's not cooked!" when eating out.
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