(Enough of this Obama talk - lets talk about something REALLY 
important like...$175 hamburgers!)

~rave!

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080520/od_nm/hamburger_dc

$175 burger: you want gold with that? By Daniel Trotta

2 hours, 20 minutes ago
 

Its creators admit it is the ultimate in decadence: a $175 hamburger.

The Wall Street Burger Shoppe just raised its price from $150 to 
assure its designation as the costliest burger in the city as 
determined by Pocket Change, an online newsletter about the most 
expensive things in New York.

"Wall Street has good days and bad days. We wanted to have the 
everyday burger (for $4) ... and then something special if you really 
have a good day on Wall Street," said co-owner Heather Tierney.

The burger, created by chef and co-owner Kevin O'Connell, seeks to 
justify its price with a Kobe beef patty, lots of black truffles, 
seared foie gras, aged Gruyere cheese, wild mushrooms and flecks of 
gold leaf on a brioche bun.

The eatery sells 20 or 25 per month in the fine dining room upstairs 
versus hundreds of $4 burgers each day at the diner counter 
downstairs, Tierney said.

Pocket Change previously designated the double truffle burger at 
Daniel Boulud's DB Bistro Moderne as the most expensive at $120, and 
the Burger Shoppe set out to top that.

Boulud's creation -- available only during black truffle season from 
December to March -- rose to $150 this past season, so the Burger 
Shoppe raised its price on Monday to $175.

"Our burger is not about the price," said Georgette Farkas, a Boulud 
spokeswoman. "If you are making something concerned only about the 
price, you are off in the wrong direction."

Without truffles, Boulud's burger costs $32. It has a ground sirloin 
patty stuffed with red wine braised short ribs.

O'Connell said the Burger Shoppe was "finding the ultimate expression 
of each one of the ingredients."

"The concept was like a mushroom-bacon-Swiss cheese burger, which is 
my favorite sort of burger," he said.

The burger comes with golden truffle mayonnaise, Belgian-style fries 
and a mixed greens and tomato salad. O'Connell pairs the dish with 
many fine wines, a lager or a toasted brown beer, or ginger ale.


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