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Tornado Burger

There are two kinds of burger patties at Tornado Burger on Murphy Road in Stafford — the regular, seasoned with salt, pepper and Worcestershire sauce, and the spicy, which also includes fresh garlic and minced jalapeño for a little bit more money.

The patties are fresh and the fries hand-cut at Tornado Burger.
Troy Fields
The patties are fresh and the fries hand-cut at Tornado Burger.

Location Info

Tornado Burger

505 Murphy
Stafford, TX 77477

Category: Restaurant > American

Region: Outside Houston

Details

Hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays; 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sundays.

Hamburger, fries and drink: $4.09

Cheeseburger, fries and drink: $4.34

Double meat, double cheese,

fries and drink: $5.24

Philly cheesesteak, fries and drink: $6.99

505 Murphy Rd., Stafford, 281-403-3278.

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The first time I visited this fast-food outlet was in September. I got the No. 1 combo, a double-meat, ­double-cheese with fries and medium drink. The price was $4.99 for regular and 50 cents extra for spicy. It came on a piece of tissue paper in a plastic basket. The awesome french fries were hand-cut.

It wasn't the easiest burger to handle. It slid around inside the bun on the lubricating layer of special sauce and melted American cheese. But it was extremely juicy and expertly cooked. The flavor of garlic and jalapeño in the spicy patty was so pronounced, it made me think of a Pakistani kebab. It was not only unique, it was the best fast-food burger I have eaten in Texas.

Tornado Burger starts with thin burger patties — I'm guessing they weigh an eighth of a pound before cooking. A flyer in the restaurant said they serve "ground fresh, never frozen" burgers and that "no burger touches the grill until you order."

If this sounds vaguely familiar, but you can't quite remember where you heard it before, check out the Web site of In-N-Out Burger (www.in-n-out.com). "At In-N-Out we use only the freshest ingredients...Never frozen. And no burger hits the grill until you ask for it."
_____________________

Transplanted Californians pine for In-N-Out burgers the way ex-pat Texans long for cheese enchiladas. In-N-Out burgers have acquired a mystique. The late Julia Child had them delivered to her hospital room when she was recovering from knee surgery. Thomas Keller, the owner of two of the most highly acclaimed restaurants in the country, confesses he eats them. Hell's Kitchen super-chef Gordon Ramsay praised them on Jay Leno's show. The list of celebrities who rave about them is lengthy.

Part of the charm is that In-N-Out is a family-owned company. Founded in 1948, at a time when most burger joints still used carhops, In-N-Out became the first chain to employ the speaker system, which makes it the inventor of the modern drive-through. There are around a hundred locations, all in California, Nevada and Arizona.

In-N-Out burgers are made from thin, one-eighth-pound patties and served on buttered and toasted buns. The onions are sliced thin; the lettuce is hand-leafed; the french fries are made from fresh-cut potatoes; and the chocolate, vanilla and strawberry milk shakes are made from pure ice cream. Other than drinks, there are only four items on the menu — french fries, a hamburger, a cheeseburger and a double/double (double meat/double cheese).

But In-N-Out is famous for its off-the-menu variations. There's the Animal Burger, which is fried in mustard and served with grilled onions. Atkins diet followers get the "Protein Burger," which is a hamburger packaged in lettuce leaves instead of a bun. And then there's the 3x3, the 4x4 and the 26x26, as the triple meat/triple cheese, quadruple meat/quadruple cheese and frat boy stunt burger with 26 patties are known.

I ate my first In-N-Out burger in San Francisco a couple of years ago. I got a double/double, and it was a good fast-food burger. But I have never been a big fan of thin patties. My gold standard is the classic Texas burger-joint burger, a thick, hand-formed half-pounder cooked medium-rare and garnished with lettuce, tomatoes, onions, pickles, mustard and mayo, with jalapeños if available. You would need to get four patties at In-N-Out to approximate the meat content of my favorite Texas burger.
_____________________

I have heard many Californians speculate that an In-N-Out would kick ass in Houston. It seems like a reasonable assertion given the quality of the product and this city's appetite for burgers in general and fast-food burgers in particular. So you'd think an In-N-Out clone would be an instant success.

Tornado's thin burgers, hand-cut fries and real ice cream shakes are nearly identical to In-N-Out's.

The spicy patty option and the availability of jalapeño slices as an add-on would even seem to go In-N-Out one better in creating a burger to satisfy Texans. Tornado Burger's promotional materials claim they're "converting former chain customers to believers by the hundreds every week."

Maybe the believers were busy with Christmas shopping when I visited Tornado Burger on a recent Monday afternoon. The place was awfully quiet. Between noon and 12:30 p.m., I counted three customers besides my group.

A couple of menu items had changed. The prices had gone up slightly, so the spicy double meat/double cheese with fries and medium drink I paid $5.49 for last time was now $5.74. And oddly, there was a Philly cheese steak added to the menu.

This time, I ordered a triple meat/triple cheeseburger with lettuce, tomato, onion and mayo, plus fries and a drink. If the double/double was a bit messy, the triple/triple was over the top. The meat slid all over the place while I ate the sandwich. I had to drop it in the basket and reorganize the layers several times in the course of consumption. But the flavor was even better than I remembered it. I think they increased the amount of garlic and chile peppers in the meat mixture. For a multi-patty burger, it was sensational.

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  • 11/09/2011 7:50:00 PM

    Is this the place by the pressure washing place ( http://www.pressurewashinghouston.co/ )? I have looked at going there but have never tried it. I'm not very adventurous when it comes to food but the food in the picture looks delicious.

  • John Aljaz 10/01/2010 6:48:00 PM

    They have great burgers, but they really need to clean the concrete out side, its FILTHY! But the burgers are amazing. Pressure Washing Houston

  • D 05/17/2010 10:55:00 PM

    Sorry, but I grew up in So Cal, and moved to Houston three years ago, and In-N-Out does not even compare to the burgers that I've had out here. I have eaten at at least a dozen places that have far superior burgers. I would say that compared to the burger joints here in Houston, if In-N-Out were to ever come out this way, people would put them somewhere in the same catergory as Wendy's. Honest opinion......

  • KnowYouKnow 06/15/2009 12:50:00 AM

    The secret of a jucy thin burger is to cook it on a hot flat top griddle (in its own grease!). You made no mention of how the heat meets the meet in your review. For those looking for that jucy jucy flat top cooked burger, go to 5 Guys on Voss, or Steak 'N Shake on Jones Road, or 11th Street Cafe in the Heights, or Smash Burger on Youngfield in Denver.

  • Robert 08/13/2008 7:02:00 PM

    http://rcbullock.blogspot.com/2008/08/tornado-burger-in-houston.html

  • Mary 06/17/2008 10:38:00 PM

    Finally made it to Tornado Burger today, and it was fabulous. I loved the soft homemade bun. The fries come in a little bag, steaming hot from the fryer. The "special sauce" though, tasted and looked like mayo. Not complaining, mind you. When events take me that way again, I'll stop in again! Good luck to you PJ and Neil!

  • Donny Wallace 01/19/2008 3:26:00 AM

    Sounds like someone has gained the unnatural addiction to corn suyrp trash burgers The best of those are at Mc. Donalds- they even put sugar in your salad.

  • J in Mo C 01/03/2008 12:12:00 AM

    Went to Tornado Burger last week and was very glad to see they were doing good business. The burgers were outstanding. The fries were great but way too salty. I really hope this place makes it. I will do my best to support them.

  • Tornado Fan 12/22/2007 7:03:00 PM

    I've been going to Tornado Burger since it opened, and Tornado Taco before that. The only thing the review neglected was their outstanding breakfast tacos. They are the best in the city. Keep up the good work. People, get out and support this gem of a restaurant!

  • PJ 12/19/2007 11:30:00 PM

    Hi Rob: My son Neil and I own the burger joint. Thanks for the accolades. It is people like you in the media that help deserving startups survive and grow. As you say, institutions are not created overnight. Little guys need a helping hand... actually, we need many helping hands! Most restauranteurs at our stage are essentially little trains going up the hill saying, "I think I can!" Very few make it to the promised land. Just as In n Out invented the modern drive-thru, we may very well have invented the Spicyburger! And we offer bacon, mushrooms, grilled onions and jalapenos. We take the trouble to blanch our fries so that they are crispier and we like to think ours are better! And our buns are handmade by a great local baker, not factory-produced. Yes, Californians do relate our burgers to In n Out, but we do not have their squeaky clean image that has come about after 50 years of deep-pocketed evolution! We compensate for that through innovation, and by grinding fresh beef chuck and becoming the freshest, fastest burgerjoint in the State of Texas. By the way the patties are 3oz, not two. An entire oz more than In n Out. It became obvious to us quickly that a burgers only joint, while possible, would require much deeper pockets, especially with road construction impeding traffic. Hence another slice of genuine Americana...the Philly Cheesesteak. We're still menu minimalists, but not to the extent we thought we could be. By the way, thanks for the tips on the cheesing of the steak! Should it come to pass that in 50 years we become a Texas institution, Rob, your review will have become a historical marker. To us, it's already worth its weight in gold. Six months in, we've broken even in the business and our customer base is growing. The next fifty should be a piece of cake. PJ

 

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