Who did we give five stars to? Mathew Kurian / Ravindranath K / The National
Who did we give five stars to? Mathew Kurian / Ravindranath K / The National

Your guide to the UAE’s best burgers



And our winner is:

The Burger Joint

Atlantis, The Palm

Dubai

5 stars

Grain-fed

Value: A pricey option — the cheeseburger is Dh62. Our favourite, the Outback burger with beef ribs, is Dh77.

Meat: Behold what may be the best in town — a wonderfully dizzying experience from the first exquisite bite to the last. One bite of TBJ’s succulent beef and you’ll be exclaiming “Holy cow”.

Mess: The burger’s too thick, so it’s impossible to eat without the aid of a knife and fork.

Bun: The softest bun I’ve encountered. The downside: with the meat’s juices, it quickly turned soggy.

Toppings: The beef is cooked so well, there’s no need for any ketchup or mayo, which will only take away the flavour of the juices. And that’s only the tip of the French fry — the lettuce was so crisp it bit like a potato chip. The relish deserves props, too.

* James Gabrillo

//

Burger Rebel

Wafi Mall, Dubai

4.5 stars

Grass-fed

Value: I ordered the Tijuana Sliders for Dh55 a plate (no fries) and ended up having the most delicious burger experience of my life, so my conclusion is “expensive, but worth it”.

Meat: I don’t normally order sliders because the patties are usually like tough little hockey pucks. These three were tender, moist and full of flavour, made from meat freshly ground in Burger Rebel’s kitchens.

Mess factor: The perfect amount.

Bun: The buns were what really made this experience. They were so fresh, I felt as though they were melting in my mouth. As I later found out, they are baked on-site and lightly grilled before serving.

Toppings: The mixture of leaf lettuce, melted Monterey jack cheese, homemade guacamole and chipotle sauce was spicy, but not overwhelmingly so.

* Ann Marie McQueen

//

Burger Fuel ??

Various, Abu Dhabi and Dubai

4.5 stars

Grass-fed

Value: Dh20 for a Hamburgini with cheese. Great value for a smaller burger which was more than adequate to satisfy my small appetite.

Meat: A chargrilled juicy, tasty patty, not too thick or thin. The meat is 100 per cent New Zealand beef flown in to the UAE.

Mess: No mess.

Bun: A fresh sesame bun.

Toppings: The standard toppings of melted cheddar, bread and butter pickles, Burger Fuel’s natural ketchup and house aioli complemented the meat perfectly and didn’t overpower.

* Sarah Ferguson

//

South Street Burger Co

Ibn Batuta and Media City, Dubai

4 stars

Grass-fed

Value: At Dh36, not big and not cheap.

Meat: I enjoyed their Cheese N Bacon Burger, which wasn’t too greasy. The meat is Canadian beef raised without hormones.

Mess: Quite clean — depending on how many toppings you put.

Bun: Fresh from a Modern Bakery wrapper! Whole-wheat and white options available.

Toppings: In the same vein as Subway, you watch your sandwich being prepared and exactly how you want it to be filled. Good range of sauces and relishes — definitely a plus point.

* Anna Seaman?

//

Shake Shack

Various, Abu Dhabi and Dubai

4 stars

Grass-fed

Value: Regular burger is Dh37.

Meat: Made of 100 per cent Angus beef, the patty remained juicy throughout.

Mess: Despite the big, juicy flavours on offer, the mess was minimal.

Bun: A fresh and soft white button bun that doesn’t get in the way of the patty and cheese.

Toppings: The big surprise is the vegetarian mushroom burger patty. Filled with melted muenster and cheddar cheeses, your first bite unleashes a torrent of gooey cheesy goodness.

* Saeed Saeed

//

Fuddruckers

Various, Abu Dhabi and Dubai

4 stars

Both grain and grass-fed

Value: The size is great for the cost (Dh31). It’s big, and I was stuffed.

Meat: I asked for it to be medium, but the meat was well-done, which was a disappointment. But it still tasted good.

Mess: Surprisingly not messy, given all the toppings I piled on there.

Bun: Fresh and just the right level of softness.

Toppings: You can make your own burger, which made me feel more in control. I piled on lettuce, tomato, onions, relish, pickles, jalapeño peppers, cheese and tomato salsa.

* Marie-Louise Olson

//

Elevation

Latifa Tower, Sheikh Zayed Road

Dubai

3 stars

Grass-fed

Value: Burger was expensive (Dh35) and pretty small — even the Vertigo burger which contains between three to 10 patties didn’t seem massive.

Meat: To rate this burger on just the meat, it would have definitely got a higher rating. The patty itself was very tasty, the meat being 100 per cent organic, grass-fed and free-range beef.

Mess: Extremely. Not easy to eat.

Bun: Nothing special.

Toppings: What let this burger down was the cheese. It was almost like a congealed liquid that covered everything and it was an oddly lurid colour. It didn’t have much taste but it made the burger very messy along with the Elevation sauce, which wasn’t great. However, the range of toppings was excellent; so my advice, skip the signature sauce and the cheese and just add ketchup. The caramelised onions were also a winner.

* Anna Seaman

//

Grand Central

Muroor Road and Dalma Mall in Abu Dhabi; Khalifah Street in Al Ain

3 stars

Grain-fed

Value: An average-sized cheeseburger and fries will set you back Dh50. What makes Grand Central worth a visit is the option of getting yummy sweet potato fries which not every burger joint has.

Meat: To western taste buds, meat patties in the UAE can sometimes have an odd taste. But this burger tastes like 100 per cent beef.

Bun: A whole wheat bun, soft and tasty, but nothing out of the ordinary.

Toppings: The burgers come with a special Russian dressing-like sauce, but you can get almost anything on them — lettuce, tomato, grilled onions, mushrooms, jalapeños, beef bacon or an egg.

* Olga Camacho

//

Burger Hood

Guardian Towers, Abu Dhabi

Grass-fed

3 stars

Value: Dh30 seemed a hefty price to pay for a burger that was definitely on the small side. We’d still be hungry if it wasn’t for the sides we ordered.

Meat: Best part of the sandwich, hands down. The beef patty was juicy and crumbled just right in your mouth.

Mess factor: High.

Bun: The menu prided itself on the “buttery brioche bun” used in constructing each burger, but to us, it just tasted like any other burger bun. It could have done with some toasting.

Toppings: The burger comes with your choice of three toppings — we went with the pickles, sautéed onions and tomato — and one choice of sauce. The sauce options are aplenty; the BH Special sauce seemed to be a combination of Thousand Island with a hint of herbs and garlic — and proved a little overpowering.

* Hala Khalaf

//

Fat Burger

various Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Sharjah

2 stars

Grain-fed

Value: Dh30 burger, but the taste and size wasn’t worth the price.

Meat taste: It was grainy and tasted fried. There was nothing exciting about the meat.

Mess: No mess at all.

Bun: A bit dry, and it tasted like a frying pan.

Toppings: You can get extra toppings like a fried egg and beef bacon, but I opted for a straight-up cheeseburger with the usual suspects. I didn’t like the fact that the lettuce was shredded, and there was not enough ketchup.

* Marie-Louise Olson

//

Burger Bureau

Wahda Mall in Abu Dhabi with more locations imminent

2 stars

Grass-fed

Value: Any burger that costs Dh40 has to blow my taste buds, and this one didn’t.

Meat: A burger is pointless without a sensational patty. This one is lifeless and dry.

Mess: It’s a big burger — I had to smush it down to fit my mouth around it.

Bun: The whole-wheat bun tastes wholesome enough, but it’s also slightly soggy, because the healthy leaf lettuce is wet.

Toppings: I have no, err, beef with the smoky BBQ sauce and the thin slices of red onion and ripe red tomato, but I have to lift up the bun to find the smattering of blue cheese. Burger Bureau offers other creative toppings like guacamole and Boursin cheese, but these will likely only mask the bland beef beneath.

* Mo Gannon

//

Max Burger

various Abu Dhabi and Dubai

2 stars

Grass-fed

Value: At Dh21 a pop for the cheeseburger, it’s more bang for your beef.

Meat: Dubbed “Sweden’s tastiest burger”, the meat itself tasted delicious, but the thin patty got lost in the mix.

Mess: Usual fast-food mess.

Bun: Tasteless — and overpowered the meat.

Toppings: On my two visits, there was way too much mayo on the burgers. Tell the server to forgo the mayo and put BBQ sauce instead. Console yourself by ordering some fries on the side — it’s calorie hell but oh so worth it.

* James Gabrillo

//

The Counter

The Beach, JBR, Dubai

4 stars

Grass-fed

Value: From the build-your-own burger concept, I ordered the 1/3lb Angus beef burger for Dh39, plus an extra Dh3 charge for the smoked beef bacon topping. You can choose one from 12 different cheeses; four from 20 different toppings, and then a choice of 20 different sauces. At Dh42, and given the sheer size of the burger (I couldn’t finish it), it’s good value.

Meat: The Counter prides itself on its naturally raised, hormone and antibiotic-free Angus beef. The meat patty was juicy, moist and freshly prepared on site.

Mess factor: The vast number of choices of toppings — plus the large size of the burger — means this got pretty messy.

Buns: The hamburger bun was flavoursome and buttery. You can also opt for a wheat bun, English muffin or pretzel bun.

Toppings: I opted for a rather conservative combo of savoury Swiss cheese, green onions, lettuce, onions confit, beef smoked bacon and mayo, which worked very well for me — the tasty cheese was perfectly melted and the beef bacon crisped to perfection. For the adventurous, there are choices of spicy pepperoncinis, roasted corn and black bean salsa, apricot sauce, Russian dressing and tzatziki.

* Sarah Ferguson

//

Best Burgers Forever

Dubai Marina

1 star

Grain-fed

Value: At Dh37, the B-Double Cheese Burger is pricey for its standard size.

Meat: It only took one bite into this burger before I knew something was wrong: the meat tasted like garlic. It turns out it wasn’t garlic; it was raw onion added by the chefs to the Angus beef that they grind in-house every day. But, whoa, was there way too much. It totally ruined the taste and sent me packing, tail between my legs.

Mess: Pale-coloured cheese oozed out over my hand, making it pretty messy.

Bun: The b-shaped bun is the kitsch element for this chain — sadly it was stale and didn’t make the experience any more enjoyable.

Toppings: Too many gherkins, which were overpowering.

* Anna Seaman

//

Gourmet Burger Kitchen

Dubai Marina Mall

2 stars

Grass-fed

Value: It’s a burger, and as such I’d say it needs to do something pretty special for Dh38. It didn’t, really.

Meat: The Angus beef was pleasant enough, without being exciting.

Mess factor: Quite messy. I had to ask for extra napkins before I’d actually got it in my mouth as the sauce was diving everywhere.

Bun: Pleasant in taste and texture, but made the cardinal error of collapsing into several pieces as I ate. Great for tapas, not so much for a burger.

Toppings: The chilli mayonnaise and ranch sauce had a decent kick. The crispy beef bacon was basically just fat (in some people’s eyes that would be a good thing). The cheese was visible, but I couldn’t taste it — possibly the chilli’s fault.

* Chris Newbould

//

Hwy 55

Muroor Road

4 stars

Grain-fed

Value: An average-sized hamburger costs just Dh21 while a meal (with fries and a drink) costs Dh40.

Meat: With the meat being shipped from the US, the hamburger was cooked to near perfection and made for a tasty meal.

Mess factor: Average.

Bun: A soft roll that perhaps broke apart a little too easily while eating, but delicious nonetheless.

Toppings: Customise your toppings with choices including coleslaw, chilli, grilled mushrooms and bell peppers.

* Evelyn Lau

//

Burger Joint NY

Nation Galleria, The Corniche

Abu Dhabi

4 stars

Grain-fed

Value: That depends on how hungry you are – a regular burger is Dh35, but you can blow Dh55 on a double cheeseburger.

Meat: There's a real homemade vibe in the fall-apart goodness of the top shoulder certified Angus beef – it tastes more like it's been grilled on a back-garden barbecue, rather than in a burger restaurant. You're asked how you want it cooked, too, which is always a nice touch. We opted for medium.

Mess: Semi-significant. That aforementioned fall-apartness does mean that the whole thing begins to disintegrate under the weight of its own juiciness after a few bites, especially the double burgers, but with no cutlery on the tables, you just have to get involved.

Bun: Nothing to write home about, but just about maintained its integrity long enough to hold in the majority of the meat.

Toppings: These are kept simple at Burger Joint NY: a choice from lettuce, tomato, onion, pickles, mustard, ketchup and mayo (at no extra cost). We went old-skool with just lettuce and ketchup – a wise selection, as the burger speaks for itself, without being slathered in toppings.

* Adam Workman

Click

to see our map of the UAE’s best burger joints.

Real estate tokenisation project

Dubai launched the pilot phase of its real estate tokenisation project last month.

The initiative focuses on converting real estate assets into digital tokens recorded on blockchain technology and helps in streamlining the process of buying, selling and investing, the Dubai Land Department said.

Dubai’s real estate tokenisation market is projected to reach Dh60 billion ($16.33 billion) by 2033, representing 7 per cent of the emirate’s total property transactions, according to the DLD.

NO OTHER LAND

Director: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal

Stars: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham

Rating: 3.5/5

How much sugar is in chocolate Easter eggs?
  • The 169g Crunchie egg has 15.9g of sugar per 25g serving, working out at around 107g of sugar per egg
  • The 190g Maltesers Teasers egg contains 58g of sugar per 100g for the egg and 19.6g of sugar in each of the two Teasers bars that come with it
  • The 188g Smarties egg has 113g of sugar per egg and 22.8g in the tube of Smarties it contains
  • The Milky Bar white chocolate Egg Hunt Pack contains eight eggs at 7.7g of sugar per egg
  • The Cadbury Creme Egg contains 26g of sugar per 40g egg
At a glance

Global events: Much of the UK’s economic woes were blamed on “increased global uncertainty”, which can be interpreted as the economic impact of the Ukraine war and the uncertainty over Donald Trump’s tariffs.

 

Growth forecasts: Cut for 2025 from 2 per cent to 1 per cent. The OBR watchdog also estimated inflation will average 3.2 per cent this year

 

Welfare: Universal credit health element cut by 50 per cent and frozen for new claimants, building on cuts to the disability and incapacity bill set out earlier this month

 

Spending cuts: Overall day-to day-spending across government cut by £6.1bn in 2029-30 

 

Tax evasion: Steps to crack down on tax evasion to raise “£6.5bn per year” for the public purse

 

Defence: New high-tech weaponry, upgrading HM Naval Base in Portsmouth

 

Housing: Housebuilding to reach its highest in 40 years, with planning reforms helping generate an extra £3.4bn for public finances

How to help

Call the hotline on 0502955999 or send "thenational" to the following numbers:

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COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Kumulus Water
 
Started: 2021
 
Founders: Iheb Triki and Mohamed Ali Abid
 
Based: Tunisia 
 
Sector: Water technology 
 
Number of staff: 22 
 
Investment raised: $4 million