Quantcast
Pool Burger/Instagram

Frankly, you don't need us to tell you what your favorite burger is. A favorite burger comes from within, but there's always room to broaden your horizons — at least as far as burgers are concerned. You could say that all great burgers have the same ingredients, or you could lean into the gluttonous layering of as many new ideas as possible between two buns. But when you ask the pros, where will they say your expansive journey should start?

Our judges — some editorial staff and some Tastemaker winners from last year — compiled a list of the eight best burgers in Austin in 2023. These chefs, especially, can appreciate the magic of an impeccably made burger. If you think about it, burgers are a public service.

Look for your favorite sandwich among the nominees for Best Burger below, try the ones that might unseat it in your rankings, and then join us on May 11 at Fair Market for our annual Tastemaker Awards tasting event and awards ceremony. Sample, savor, and chow down on a variety of sliders during the event before voting for your favorite during the Burger Throwdown, presented by Goodstock by Nolan Ryan. Early Bird tickets are on sale now.

Bad Larry Burger Club
If Bad Larry Burger Club sounds like a blustery group of all-in enthusiasts, then the name is doing its job. This burger is not a cute stack of carefully sliced toppings. It’s a pile of smashed beef layered with gooey cheese and threats to spill out on your shirt, which if you shop with Bad Larry, is possibly derogatory toward a Texas politician or controversial figure around town. It’s also not a restaurant, according to the bad man himself, who slings burgers as a pop-up.

Better Half Coffee & Cocktails
Better Half straddles one of those fine lines between good date night spot, group gathering place, and casual coffee shop for a solo outing. Balancing so many expectations at once, it’s no wonder the place is also a great burger joint with not one, but three different options. And there really is something for everyone, between the classic ground beef cheeseburger, veggie burger (with Beyond Meat patty), and juicy chicken burger. All three are $6 during happy hour, and don’t forget to pair with those cauliflower tots.

Casino El Camino
This bar and grill, the gate to Dirty 6th, is a divey staple for festival crowds and locals who miss Austin’s receding weirder side. It advertises its “world famous hamburgers” on its iconic sign, and the burgers do deliver. Served on a grilled bun, these thick three-quarter-pound patties come pink in the middle for maximum juiciness. The atmosphere, with a pool table, campy gothic decor, and great tunes, makes it fun to stay even if a burger isn’t in your cards that day.

Crown & Anchor Pub
There are staples and then there’s the Crown & Anchor Pub. The campus-area establishment is going on four decades as a favorite haunt for UT Austin students, returning alumni, and Hyde Park residents. While the pub leans into the dive bar aesthetic with dart boards, pool tables, and a dog-friendly patio, the menu is anything but limited. With six different offerings, plus a build-your-own option, you might be better off betting on enjoying your meal than your dart board skills.

Dai Due
Best to clear your afternoon before diving into the Dai Due burger, which is sure to induce a nice REM cycle with its double patty, ground with Dai Due bacon. Multiple James Beard Award winner chef Jesse Griffiths remains a pioneer in the farm-to-table movement, sourcing ingredients from Texas and primarily in the Austin region — and the burger is no exception. A sesame cemita bun sandwiches Stryk cheddar cheese, house-made dill pickles and onions, and the whole heavenly ensemble comes with a side of french fries and unbelievable beet ketchup.

JewBoy Burgers
One of Austin’s best-known Jewish destinations (ask your favorite gentile to name one), this burger bar on Airport Boulevard gets creative without over-dressing a damn good burger. Although the classic combo is perfectly seasoned, there are more ideas. “The Yenta” and “The Goyim” pair patties with a latke and all the ingredients of a perfect pastrami sandwich, respectively. There’s always a line out the door, and rightfully so — can we get a l’chaim to that?

LeRoy And Lewis Barbecue
The fact that anyone would choose a burger at a barbecue joint is testament enough to LeRoy and Lewis. These cult-favorite sandwiches are so famous that the team has shared its official technique in great detail. They shape freshly ground beef into half-pound patties, season with salt and pepper, smoke at around 250 degrees, and then sear on the live fire. Texas Monthly calls this burger, finished with cheese and onions fried on the burger remnants, “hard to top.”

Pool Burger
Half the fun of Pool Burger is, in fact, the pool — by which we mean the one and only Deep Eddy. Austinites love to debate the merits of Barton Springs vs. Deep Eddy, but Pool Burger’s proximity to the latter makes for a pretty strong case. There are few better respites from Austin heat than a post-swim recharge with one of their wagyu burgers from Peeler Farms. The classic Pool Burger is a staple for a reason, but don’t skip the Blue Hawaiian: That griddled pineapple, bacon, and crumbled blue cheese combo with thousand island dressing is something we think about year round.

Pool Burger burgers

Pool Burger is named for an unbeatable combo — how could it not make the list?

Ad Placement 300x100
Ad Placement 300x600

CultureMap Emails are Awesome

Austin 'Top Chef' winner emerges after controversy to open upscale Mexican restaurant, plus more top stories

hot headlines

Editor’s note: It’s that time again — time to check in with our top stories. From cross-country tours to best-in-state colleges and snacks, here are five articles that captured our collective attention over the past seven days.

1. Austin 'Top Chef' winner emerges after controversy to open upscale Mexican restaurant. Bacalar has opened after years of preparation and controversy surrounding the chef's departure from his last role.

2. Nebraska Furniture Mart to bring massive new store and 700 jobs to Austin suburb. NFM will anchor a development that will include a 250-room hotel and 30,000-square-foot convention center.

3. Hello Kitty Cafe Truck says hi to Austin on cross-country tour. Among the new items is a bright pink tote bag with rainbow straps and desserts decorating the front, and an assortment of Hello Kitty baked goods.

4. UT Austin rises to the top in new list of best Texas schools for 2024. UT Austin claimed No. 2 in Texas, and ranked No. 32 nationally. It fared similarly in Niche's list of top public universities.

5. How to get every possible discount at the 2023 State Fair of Texas. The fair starts its 24-day run at Fair Park in Dallas on September 29, bringing with it music, games, food, and more.

R&B singer Mélat epitomizes the independent Austin music experience in new album

local releases

Even though Mélat is always busy — appearing in seemingly every major community showcase — she hasn't released a new album in four years. That is, until today.

Canon Metis: Wiser Than Gods and Mortal Men — with an appropriately grandiose title for the R&B singer's prodigal return — is out on September 29, with 14 gooey tracks incorporating everything from trap beats to gospel harmonies. It follows up 2019's After All: Episode One, with similarly spacious orchestrations and a little more confidence this time around on the songwriter's part.

"I feel like [after] going through COVID and all the things that have happened in the past four years ... it's the dawning of a new era for me," says Mélat. "I feel like I've shed a significant amount of fear, and doubt, and all these things that as humans we have to work to get off of ourselves. It feels like a new beginning for me."

The title of this "foundational" album, in Mélat's words, reaches back to two EPs that the singer has since grown out of, but represented a similar feeling of self-definition as her first-ever releases. First was Canon Aphaea, then Canon Ourania; Both referenced Greek goddesses. This time, Metis — Zeus' first wife, a Titan goddess, and the embodiment of wisdom — was the inspiration.

M\u00e9lat Canon Metis: Wiser Than Gods and Mortal MenThe album cover ties in "Easter Eggs" from Black woman-owned brands: fashion by Savage X Fenty, Black Girl Magic wine by McBride Sisters Wine Company, and an Ethiopian necklace referencing the singer's heritage.Shot by Marshall Tidrick

The subtitle comes from humbler origins than it sounds; probably something she read on Wikipedia, Mélat says, but definitely borrowed nonetheless. The quote also gives a name to a track in which the singer speaks semi-candidly about false idols and the wisdom to duck away from the judgment of "mere mortals."

"I'm like a lot of people in that I can be my worst my own worst critic," she says. "I hate my speaking voice, but I put it on the album [because] my gut was telling me, no, this needs to be said. There are songs that were cut from the album [that were part of] the plan the whole time."

Much of Mélat's local pull comes from her transparency about being an independent artist, which she discusses often on social media and will surely expound upon more when the Austin chapter of Women in Music launches later this year, with her on the leadership team. Nothing about working without a label is foreign to Austin musicians (although the landscape is slowly growing), and the singer confirms that she doesn't "know any other way to do it," but hints of that freedom shine through some tracks.

"Canon Metis," the opening track, pieces together a sort of trailer for the rest of the album with atmospheric synths and spoken announcements by disembodied femme voices — a softly futuristic approach. But "Lambs to Lions" and "The Now" deliver nostalgia via backup vocals and instrumental stylings, while "I.D.M.T.L.Y. (Freestyle)" pares things down to a simple phone recording that the songwriter and her close collaborator, sound engineer, and manager, Pha The Phenom, chose not to develop any further.

No through-lines were questioned. Nothing needed to be justified, except to each other. Both have gotten into meditating, anyway, so it's all about feel.

"I feel like I've gathered all this wisdom," Mélat says. "You can't really trust the quote-unquote gods, which are the shiny things that will distract you ... and you can't really worry too much about the judgment of others, because everybody's just human. I need to do what feels right for me."

There is no tour planned to promote the album yet, but given the singer's track record, it won't be long until something is on the books. A music video for "So Help Me God," incorporates AI technology via Kaiber AI, will be released on October 4.

Listen to Canon Metis: Wiser Than Gods and Mortal Men on your favorite streaming platform.

Unique art sale champions thousands of works by Austin artists who may not have homes

art everywhere

The streets of Austin reveal a vibrant artistic spirit if you know where to look. Art From the Streets (AFTS), a nonprofit uplifting unhoused artists, invites art lovers to discover this local creativity at the annual Art Show & Sale on October 21-22.

Art from the Streets sale

Photo courtesy of Art From The Streets

Onlookers look through hundreds of unique art pieces by unhoused Austinites.

Art From the Streets has announced its 31st Annual Art Show & Sale at the Blue Genie Art Bazaar, best known for its holiday market. This two-day event will showcase thousands of original artworks from unhoused and at-risk artists in the Austin area, from compelling portraits to vibrant abstracts, all while supporting an amazing creative community.

Attending this event gives the Austin community the special opportunity to meet these artists, hear their stories, and purchase their one-of-a-kind creations, with 95 percent of the art sale proceeds going directly to the artists themselves.

In turn, it provides platform for the artists to proudly display their works, coming into the arts scene in an official, marketable capacity. It brings visibility to their skills and lets them earn income from their passion.

"We believe that these artistic endeavors form a pathway to self-determination, and we invite the Austin community to join us this October in supporting these artists by making connections and purchasing some amazing art," said AFTS executive director Kelley Worden in a press release.

Volunteers form the backbone of AFTS by assisting with a wide range of tasks, from facilitating art creation sessions to helping with exhibition setup and more; the funds that AFTS collects through donations and art sales are directly funneled back into supporting these volunteers' efforts, providing art supplies, covering exhibition costs, and supplying other resources needed to uplift the unhoused artists in the Austin community.

The 31st Annual Art From the Streets Show & Sale will be held at the Blue Genie Art Bazaar from October 21-22. Attendance is free and open to the public, with a suggested $5 donation at the door to help support AFTS' mission of empowering unhoused artists. RSVP on Eventbrite.