Posts Tagged ‘shake shack’

Designer Burgers

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

Designer Burgers: In Vogue

(photo courtesy of Vogue)

The famous ground-beef mixture from Pat LaFrieda has been the talk of burger circles the last few years — a dizzying time in which the Spotted Pig, Shake Shack, Stand, and half a dozen other contenders have taken the previously humble sandwich to the proverbial next level. The source of all that burger greatness, as Men’s Vogue recently wrote, is LaFrieda, the city’s top source for high-end wholesale meats. Scratch the wholesale part! Soon, and for the first time ever, the burger that launched a thousand blog posts will be available at the retail counter at Market Table, Joey Campanero and Mike Price’s new restaurant in the West Village.

The meat counter will also sell the pork chops that inspired a cult following at the little owl. “People always asked me, ‘Where do you get your meat? Where do you get your meat?’ I put like three things on it and that’s it. But nobody could get it before,” Campanero tells us. Meanwhile, the magic meat that haunts the dreams of New York’s burger lovers will come in preformed patties of about eight ounces, with a little card written by Price, the restaurant’s executive chef, saying how to cook them. Of if you really want to have the Shake Shack experience, get them in four-ounce patties. You don’t even have to stand in line holding a vibrator.

 

LaFrieda beef for Shake Shack: Now it can be yours. (Treo present to indicate scale.)

Photo: Josh Ozersky

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Shake Shack NYC

Saturday, December 15th, 2007

Shake Shack is a restaurant serving hamburgers, hot dogs, and custard in New York, NY’s Madison Square Park. The eatery opened in July of 2004. Since its opening, Shake Shack has proven popular with New Yorkers, even garnering the distinction of being named “Best Burger 2005″ by New York magazine. [1]

 

An order of hamburgers from the Shake Shack

 


An order of hamburgers from the Shake Shack. The fries swimming in melted cheese (not pictured) is a must.

The restaurant was conceived and developed by Danny Meyer’s Union Square Hospitality Group, which maintains a variety of restaurants in the Union Square area. It was designed by Sculpture in the Environment, an architectural and environmental design firm based in Lower Manhattan.

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Excuse me! I have to go back to work

The line can stretch to over an hour (see proof above), especially on weekends when the weather is pleasant. Their website has a webcam which shows the current line in real time. All-in-all, a must-do on any NYC visit.

External links

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