When you order a doublepatty at Hoodburger but should have ordered a single patty because you SUPRISINGLY didn't realise it would actually taste more meaty
I ordered a double cheeseburger. It had 2 meat patties. The meat to everything else ratio is too high. Who would have thought!?
A farm burger is a slang term originating in Hamilton, New Zealand, around 2009. The term was used to describe a burger made by a student at the University of Waikato from different burgers on the McDonald's menu after a night of drinking cask wine. The student and his friends, as usual, ended the night at McDonald's and he couldn't decide what he wanted so he ordered one of each type of burger: a quarter pounder, McChicken and Fillet-o-fish. He was so hungry he couldn't wait to eat them separately so he put all the meat together on the same bun. His friends cheered him on and afterwards they named it the "farm burger" because it had had "all the animals of the farm" on it.
McDonald's customer: I'm very hungry, Got one of those burgers with all the meats? A farmburger McDonald's cashier: Such a product does not exist, sir. I think you must have dreamed it.
McDonald's customer: Oh, then just give me a quarter pounder, McChicken and a Fillet-o-fish
A local term in Oxford for a burger with both a meat, and a chicken patty. This was invented in 1818 by Lord Harryson of Yorkshire during his studies at Baelliol College.
Hello sir, may I have a Harryson burger and a pitcher of your finestbeer please?
A term originating from a caravan in Great Yarmouth by a bunch of pool players, used in turn to conclude a series of events which has resulted in pure justice either on or off the table. Usually complimented by a screech of Gambon.
A: That was a lucky snooker he got there!
A: Oh no! he went in off on his next visit.
B: AHHHH THE JUSTICEBURGER!!
A: ahh Gambon!