I tried Shake Shack and In-N-Out side by side - and it's clear which one is better
I started my burger journey at Shake Shack. Opened in May 2015, this is a relatively new location for the East Coast chain. It's in a new housing development on South Lamar Street, near all the Austin action, but not particularly close to anything exciting. An Alamo Drafthouse is its neighbor.
Inside, the decor is modern and understated. The moss wall, hanging terrariums, and local plants offered up something interesting and green to look at while I stood in the unusually short line.
Before I knew it I was ordering a ShackBurger and fries — my usual.
The total came to $8.81 — a bit pricey for Texas fast food, but this is Shake Shack. I sat down with my buzzer and waited.
It wasn't long before I had my ShackBurger in its standard open-top bag that lets the food get cold as quickly as possible.
Austin's In-N-Out Burger is 19 minutes away from its Shake Shack. I knew I had to hurry to taste test both burgers while they were fresh. I didn't even have time to gawk at the Texas State Capitol's beautiful bronze dome — a shame.
Fifteen minutes later — I caught the lights well — I arrived at In-N-Out. It's in an equally unassuming neighborhood, but close to the highway.
The interior is classic burger shop — no moss or succulents here. As an In-N-Out newbie, I was a bit confused by the menu — $3.80 for a double cheeseburger? That can't be right. I asked the cashier about the mythical "animal-style" burger and he rattled off a long list of the things they were going to do to my lunch.
FYI, there's no extra charge for "animal style," which adds pickles, extra sauce, grilled onions, and mustard fried into the actual meat patty.
I got an animal-style Double Double and an order of regular fries. The whole meal was only $5.95, which felt like a bargain after Shake Shack. No fancy buzzer system here, just good old fashioned order numbers.
"Quality you can taste"? We'll see about that ...
I received my food pretty quickly. I guess you could say I was "in and out."
At last, the hour was at hand. I got both burgers and took them back to my Airbnb only a couple minutes down the road.
First up: In-N-Out, a totally new burger experience for me.
I have to say, the In-N-Out fries impressed me. They have the perfect ratio of crisp exterior to mushy interior, and they taste incredibly fresh. According to the container they're served in, they're sliced and fried in-store. I ate all of them.
The Double Double sure looked pretty — as if it had been carefully assembled by a food photographer.
As for taste, the animal-style Double Double is one of the best fast food burgers I've ever had. The meat was perfectly seasoned and blended well with the flavor of the special sauce. All the veggies were pretty bland, but the pickles were perfectly crunchy without being overly saturated with vinegar.
On to Shake Shack. I'm a Shack regular, but only at the chain's New York locations.
Shake Shack's fries are, in a word, disappointing. They're shipped to the store frozen, and that's exactly how they taste. They have a vaguely oily quality, but they're edible.
If I thought the Double Double looked picture perfect, the ShackBurger was even prettier.
The ShackBurger is absolutely the burger perfected: a nicely seared and immensely flavorful patty with fresh veggies and the best bun you can put on a burger.
THE VERDICT: It seems you get what you pay for. Though In-N-Out's fries wowed me in a major way — and its burger was fantastic — Shake Shack's meat is tastier.
Shake Shack deserves the crown, but In-N-Out is a still an awesome burger chain. It's all fatty fast food with a great reputation, which means it's all inherently tasty. You can't really go wrong — but you can get it right. Shake Shack is a bit better, but I still won't be able to resist In-N-Out's siren song the next time I'm near one.
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