The burger: It was not lost on co-owner Thomas LaFleche that Brunson's Pub, his classic Payne Avenue neighborhood saloon, deserved a classic burger. That explains the presence of the "Classic Double" on the kitchen's gastropub-esque menu.
"Pink, or no pink?" asked my server when I ordered it. I opted for the former, and that's exactly what was delivered, with the exterior taken to an occasionally crisped-up char. What's the strategy behind the two patties?
"It creates height to the burger," said LaFleche. "Presentation is part of what you experience when you go to a restaurant."
There's truth in that whole we-eat-with-our-eyes adage, and there's plenty to see here, burger-wise. The thin, wide patties extend to the bun's edges, and the patties' top surface gets the seasoning treatment after they're placed on the flat top grill.
"It's our own proprietary seasoning," said LaFleche. "Then you flip the patty, and the heat of the grill locks in the seasoning to the meat."
Cheese is American ("Because it's named 'Classic Double,' we want to stay true to what an American classic cheeseburger is all about," said LaFleche), and it sure packs a salty -- in a good way -- wallop. Another bonus: as the cheese melts (and boy, does it melt, approaching a gooeyness that's downright Jucy Lucy-like), it fuses patty to patty, and patties to bun.
The bun, a beauty, hails from Saint Agnes Baking Co.
"I'd had their milk bun at other places, and that's how I found it," said LaFleche. "It tastes great, but it's also the presentation. It looks good, it has such a great shine. It's a sexy bun, and it also holds up to everything that we put into it. I probably tested four or five types of buns, but I knew that it was going to be this one. Also, Saint Agnes is maybe a mile from the restaurant, and I'm trying to keep as many things as possible local, in the neighborhood."