Honest Burgers is much as you would guess, a simple
place which knocks out very decent burgers with little fuss. Their Soho
outlet is their second after Brixton, and believe it or not, the side street
location is rather calm – both in comparison to Brixton Village and also for
the environs of Soho itself. It even features some outdoor seating.
There is no booking here of course, so expect a good wait.
It’s very popular, as Brixton openings seem to be upon roll-out. There’s a predictable
“I preferred their earlier stuff” caché in labouring the Brixton origins (as
with Franco Manca), but as I’m from North London (and not the Home Counties via
art school), Soho suits me just fine.
My burger (sourced via The Ginger Pig) is cooked medium-rare
without the quibble of neighbouring Byron. The patty is high quality, fat and
incredibly juicy. Smoked bacon adds a lot of flavour, but the cheese doesn’t
dominate too much. Nothing worse than some gastro-pub whacking on masses of
Quickes Cheddar or similar to turn a burger into a cheese roll.
The bun is contemporary-default brioche, it comes with pickle and some
other bits, and most importantly it comes with chips. Rosemary salt chips in
this case, and quite impressive they are too. At £9 (£8 without bacon) for both
burger and fries, it stridently competes with Byron at the cheaper end of the
quality burger market.
Drinks range from lemonade in jam jars (retro Mason-style, just
to remind you it’s 2011/12) to a decent range of beers including a decent
selection from Redchurch. Their pale ale is a faithful rendition of a Pacific
Northwest ale, but not so sickly in the floral and hoppy as some can be.
Service was swift, but even with the hordes of disappointed
would-be diners ogling our burgers from the cold, we didn’t feel pressured by staff to
hurry at all. They take your number and call you, so the queue is
managed in a more amenable way than many other places. I hate to invoke the obvious, but it really is
an honest proposition; superb burgers executed with understated flair but with fun
design touches ranging from great typography to the trivial, such as these cool straws - seemingly on-brand in hunting green. Brighton is to be their third outlet I hear.
Food – 9/10
Drink – 8/10
Service - 9/10
Value – 8/10
Tap water tales – 4/10 (none offered or requested)
Staff Hotness – 7/10
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