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The Linkery Burger with 'The Lot' in San Diego

Editor's note: AHT reader Colin Parent started blogging about food while a law student in New York City. He now lives, works, and eats in his native San Diego, a city whose burgers we have unfortunately (and unintentionally) neglected. Noticing our our lack of San Diego coverage, he volunteered to fill in the gaps. Here's his first San Diego review, with more to come.

20090224-linkeryburger.jpg

San Diego is often forgotten, stuck in the shadow of Los Angeles (a somewhat larger city to the north). But San Diego has excellent food, burger-related and otherwise. It's a more relaxed cuisine, with strong border influences and a growing emphasis on local and slow food. The center of San Diego is overwhelmed with restaurants catering to tourists, often with mediocre fare, but those hungry for more need only look at the periphery where the pubs and the neighborhood bistros are. There are hidden gems for serious eating in San Diego—you just have to seek them out.

One such gem is The Linkery, one of the first slow food restaurants in San Diego. Located in North Park, an old suburb of downtown, The Linkery and its neighborhood have both been leading players in the recent welling affection for local food and culture in San Diego. While there have always been excellent burgers in San Diego, the Linkery was among the first serious restaurants to include a kicked-up “fancy burger” to satisfy the burger-eating foodie set.

The Linkery’s burger is served Australian-style with "the lot," meaning it arrives with a whole host of toppings. The burger doesn't just include house-ground pastured Spanish Oak Ranches beef—it’s also topped with a fried egg, one slice of house cured bacon, rich smoky Gouda cheese, and thin slices of pickled beets. The menu tactfully omits the reference to the pickled beets, which are now served on the side, along with more traditional house-made cucumber pickles.

Why are beets served on the side? A few years ago, the owner Jay Porter told me that he simply stopped listing the pickled beets on the menu description because people would often request them to be withheld. He preferred a little culinary guerilla warfare, forcing patrons to at least try the beets before objecting to them on principle.

Unlike the beets, which aren't listed on the menu but come on the side, grilled pineapple is listed on the menu and appears on the burger in the thinnest, most imperceptible of slices. The reduced pineapple is a result of the years-long evolution of this excellent burger. When I first ate one while watching the World Cup in 2006, it was served on rectangular toasted shepherd’s bread and was covered in an excess of toppings that made the thing simply inedible. The patty was delicious, a loosely packed, almost irregular shape of fatty, globular goodness. But the thing was so tall that when it was picked up, everything just slid off. I had to finish it with a fork and knife.

I would warn my eating companions that, while the burger was delicious, it was messy and impossible to eat. To my initial surprise, this description almost universally resulted in someone ordering it.

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Although still a gut buster, the burger is now more orderly. The pineapple has slimmed down. The buns are now made in-house—both soft and a little crusty, they are more adept at corralling the burger’s ample toppings. The pickled beets have become thinner, more like silver dollars, and are now politely served on the side. The adventurous eaters that opt into them are rewarded with a moderate bite that foils, but doesn’t overwhelm, the beef’s core fatty flavor.

This excellent burger makes a great addition to the pantheon of San Diego burger cuisine. (And vegetarians don't have to stay home: A meatless version replaces the beef patty with a grilled portobello mushroom and omits the bacon).

The Linkery

3794 30th St, San Diego CA
619-255-8778
Fri. to Sun., noon - 11:30 p.m.; Mon. to Thurs., 5:30 p.m. - 11:30 p.m.
thelinkery.com

18 Comments:

Thank gawd, a San Diego contributor! I get so sad seeing all the posts for L.A. So tantalizingly close, and yet so far away... I've only lived here in SD for a half a year, and I still haven't found a good burger yet. Hope you'll have some great recommendations!

I must try this when I'm out visiting next summer!

I've been digging the burger at Nicky Rotten's when we've been out there. I'd also like to try Neighborhood.

Great review from the west coast. I hope Damon take's some notes on being succinct from Colin.

The Linkery is by far my fav. restaurant in San Diego. The owner, Jay, is one of the least snobby/stuck-up creative foodies around, and it shows in the menus and the atmosphere of the restaurant. The menu changes daily to reflect the freshest ingredients they can get their hands on - and only from sustainable farms and ranches. Their sausages are amazing (don't taste fatty/greasy), as is just about everything else they serve. For a first-time diner I would suggest the "picnic plate" : choice of sausages, apple slaw, potato salad, a slice of gouda cheese, and bread. They also have a lot of good beers, wines, and ales available.

Another burger place I recommend is the quirky Tiolis Crazy Burger on 30th: http://www.tioliscrazeeburger.com/ Besides having just about every style burger you could ask for, they also have more exotic meats such as ostrich, alligator, kangaroo, venison, and antelope.

Wow, a burger with beets, a fried-egg and pineapple?! And it's in America?!

This is pretty much the definition of what we call a 'kiwi' burger back home in New Zealand (I say as an ex-pat NZ'er living in the US) as it's the classic traditional burger of NZ with all those toppings. Unfortunately, I don't live anywhere near this place.

I actually made one for myself when I was last back home in NZ:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/ryath/3304286105/

When I was in NZ I also had one of these types of burgers. Amazing.

I can get behind any good-lookin' sandwich with an egg on it. And I like the mission to be a beet-booster. That's adorable.

I've heard both good and bad about The Linkery. But, having seen this burger, we may have to go give it a try. There are so many great burgers in this area, it's hard to get around to try them all.

Rocky's Crown Pub in Pacific Beach is a GREAT burger

You lost me at beets,.....other then that Im all for it!

I'll take one to go!!!

Beets? On my burger?

I don't think so.

There's a burger almost exactly the same at an Irish pub here (virginia) called Ned Devines.

It's damn tasty, and they do list the beet and pineapple on the menu.

I would add Hodad's in Ocean Beach and Crazy Burger in North Park.

Hodad's is a local classic!

I feel like quoting the line from "Green Eggs and Ham" (as I do to my two-year-old): "Try them, try them and you may!"

Beetroot ("beets") adds a lovely contrast to a hamburger, like a chutney or a sauce. Just include it in moderation.

Awesome post!! Who else lives in San Diego? I'm born and raised and will be moving to North Park next week. I actually just came back from lunch at the Linkery. What an awesome day to have a nice local beer and sandwich. :)

Quite interesting! Great article! I think some thinly sliced beets will be great. I had it first in a sandie a ong time ago back in trinidad..on a chinese prk sandwich..it was awesome!..
Kiwi burger..Oi, Oi, Oi

I would go with Nessy burger as the best in San Diego. Noone ever mentions it.

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