cheesy bacon burger fries (2024)

OK, so the recipe for cheesy bacon burger fries is a bit of a hybrid between two favourites – our tater tots recipe and our enchilada steak fries. Both wonderful recipes, but if you combine the two, well, it looks awful on a plate, but tastes delicious. Honest guv, promise. Scroll down if all you’re here for are the recipes. Sob.

Meanwhile, here’s part three of our Iceland trip! You’ll find parts one and two right here and here. Run, don’t walk. Remember, more travel stuff in our new book which can be bought for the tiny sum of £4.99 right here!

twochubbycubs go to iceland: part three

Tired from yesterday’s day of looking into cracks, dealing with spurting geysers and admiring a foamy gush, we decided to spend the day mincing about in Reykjavik, seeing the sights, buying tat. As you do. We filled up on an early breakfast and walked the thirty or so minutes along the seafront into the town centre.It feels so peculiar to be shopping and walking around with everyone at 10am, with the sky still inky black and the very first fingers of sunlight just poking through. We could cheerfully live there – we don’t need the light – already got arthritis, might as well go for rickets and get the fullhouse. We stopped (shamefully) for a coffee in Dunkin’ Donuts. I know, I know, eat local, blah blah, but in our defence they had a gorgeous selection of donuts and we wanted to nick their WiFi. The hotel wifi was crap – almost like being back in 2000 and trying to watch p*rn on a dial-up modem. That was an awful experience, let me tell you. We decided on a rough schedule of the National Museum, the church, shops and then Escape the Room. After finishing our coffee, tutting at children and other tourists, we were on our way.

We walked through the parks and headed up to theNational Museum of Iceland, full of vim and joy and wonder from the beautiful snow-filled parks and the frozen lake, pausing only briefly to try and find a toilet. There were signs everywhere but no visible toilet block – presumably because, if Iceland was anything like England, as soon as you enclose three toilets in concrete and asbestos, you’ll have a seedy man with a hand-crank drilling a glory hole and putting his name on the wall. After much looking, we eventually found one of those tiny automatic toilets that look like a TARDIS, with the spinning door and scary buttons. Unlike England, you didn’t need to pay 20p for the privilege of pissing, and Paul was soon merrily enclosed in this tiny metal tube having a wee. He didn’t bank on mehiding around the back and screaming in his face as he emerged, but well, we like to keep things fresh. You’ll see these all over Reykjavik.We were at the museum in no time at all.

Well, let me just say this – for all that we heard that Icelandic folk were friendly, welcoming and pleasant (and, to be fair, they were for the most part),every last member of staff in the museum had a face like they’d seen their arse and didn’t like the colour of it. Clearly smiling and pleasantries were off the menu. I’ve never felt such guilt for asking for a bloody welcome leaflet.

I have a bit of a love/hate thing with museums. See I want to be one of those people in coats that smell of eggs that will stand and …hmmm and …oh I see over every exhibit, but try as I might, I just don’t have the attention span. It was all so very dry and boring for a country forged from fire and ice. I was captivated by the sight of some hipster twatknacker doing warm-up exercises in the ‘Vikings’ section. Why? He was making sure all eyes were on him as his silly little man-bun bobbed up and down.

We did happen across a mildly interesting exhibition on women in the workplace, which afforded us the chance to titter at some exposed breasts and make blue remarks, but that was it. There was an old style Bakelite phone sitting on a plinth – Paul picked it up, looked grave and then shouted ‘NO DEAL’, much to the obvious hatred of the stern looking curator. We make our own fun, at least. We took a moment to look around the gift shop but again, the staff seemed so unwelcoming that we put down the little bottle of pink rock salt that we were going to buy and hastened on our way. You’d think judging by her pinched face and obvious expression of blistering hatred that she’d mined the salt herself using her teeth.

In Reykjavik, your eyes are always drawn to a church high up on the hill called Hallgrímskirkja, and despite misgivings about how steep the hill was vs how fat our English little bodies were, we set out to have an explore and a look. Perhaps it was the promise of an exceptionally large organ that enticed us. Forty minutes and much swearing later, we arrived, took the obligatory photos, marvelled at the fact that this church smelled exactly like an English church (foist, farts and cabbage soup) and had a reverent look around.

It was wonderful, it really was. I’m not a religious person – I’m not going down on my knees unless it’s to pick up change, give a blowj*b or a bizarre combination of the two– but even I was captivated. The lighting, the architecture, the ten million girls shrieking into their hands and milling around – all wonderful. It was prayer time, so everyone was head-bowed and silent, bar for the vicar who somewhat ruined the placidity by bellowing urgently into his phone from high in the eves. He could have been giving a sermon, I suppose, though it rather sounded like he’d been stabbed in the throat and was calling urgently for help.

We waited until most of the tourists had filtered back out before walking up to the altar. I noticed that neither of us had burst into flames for our wicked sodomising ways, leaving me comfortable enough to inch forward to look at the ornate work on the lectern. I’d barely taken in a detail when a tiny mobile phone on a stick crossed my vision, close enough to part my eyebrows. Well, honestly. A tourist with a selfie stick. I find them pointless at the best of times – why would you go on holiday just to take a photo of your face gazing blankly into middle distance whilst blocking out anything pretty? That happens to me every time I look in the mirror to shave. That, and tears of sadness.

Naturally, Paul and I were so aghast that we spent the next fifteen minutes subtly following this poor lady around the church, making sure we were just in the background of all her shots, grimacing and gurning away. She eventually caught on when I tripped over the edge of a pew in my haste to get the top of my head poking into her shot of the font and her face. We made a sharp exit. I like to think we’ll be on a Facebook page far away – the two fat menaces of Iceland.

As we left, we noticed a lift that we’d missed in our haste to get inside – a lift which took you right to the top of the church tower (and that’s high – the church being the sixth tallest structure in Iceland). Perfect! After paying a small charge to keep the church going, we were in the lift and away, with only a momentary and startling stop halfway up, when the lift stopped and the doors opened on a solid brick wall. I’ve seen Bad Girls, I know this is how it ends, but before I’d had chance to scratch ‘FENNER’ into the bricks the lift rattled away and we were at the top.

Stunning. I could post all manner of fancy photos from the top of here but really, they all look very similar. This photo should give you a chance to see how colourful the houses are and how Reykjavik is laid out.

cheesy bacon burger fries (1)

Taking photos is actually quite difficult, as the little openings which provide the view have bars across them (presumably to stop you hurling yourself out through the shame of ruining someone’s photos), meaning you have to undertake a nail-biting manoeuvre of holding your phone in your hands over a 70m drop. I get the jitters stirring my tea, so seeing Paul waving his phone around had my arse nipping. Mind, not as much as the fact that, completely and utterly oblivious to where I was, I took a moment for quiet reflection and leant against the central column, only to have my eardrums blown through my skull by the giant bell no more than 3ft above my head ringing in 2pm.I said an exceptionally non-church friendly word at the top of my voice, removed my trousers from my sphincter and, somewhat dazed, went to find Paul, whosomehow hadn’tmanaged to either drop his phone or sh*t himself. Truly, a miracle. Cheers Big G.

The next couple of hours were spent looking around the many, many stores that fill Rekjavic’s main shopping streets, though I’ll say this right now – if I never see another stuffed f*cking puffin again I’ll be happy. Or a t-shirt that suggested fat people were great because they can’t outrun polar bears (yeah, but we can eat them, so you overlooked that one). We bought two figurines for the games room and, thanks to Paul leaving my iPad chargers in the old room and the maid being dishonest enough to keep it, a new charger from a knock-off Apple shop where again, we were met with abysmal customer service – waiting almost ten minutes for the bespectacled little spelk to finish his conversation and address the only customers for miles. Listen, don’t take my moaning as evidence that the Icelandic are a frosty (ha-de-ha) bunch, they’re not – aside from the odd knobhea*d, everyone was charming.

We partook in a couple of traditional ‘street food’ items which were just bloody amazing – fries at ReykjavikChipsand a hotdog fromBæjarins Beztu Pylsur. The fries place we happened across just off the main shopping street and it was amazing, even though it was just fries andBéarnaise sauce washed down with beer. You get the fries piping hot in a paper cone with sauce dribbled all over them, and you take a seat at a tiny table with a hole drilled in to hold your cone, all served with beer. Something so simple but done right. The hotdog was a weird one – it really was just a bog-standard hotdog – delicious, but I couldn’t understand the fanfare bar the fact that the stand had apparently been there since time immemorial. Perhaps it was the fact that the guy serving officially had Dreamboat status – not our type, heavens no, buthe had one of those faces that moisten knickers just with a glance. Bastard.

Once we were full and our wallets empty, we decided it was either time to Escape the Room or go back to the hotel for a Fat Nap.After a bit of deliberation, we decided our time would be best spent walking along to Reykjavik’s version of ‘Escape the Room’, where you’re locked in a room by a sinister figure and told you will never escape. After a short but arresting diversion via the offices of the Chinese Embassy, we arrived. The woman in charge was wonderful – full of good cheer and welcoming bonhomie. We were given a choice between prison, curing cancer or escaping the clutches of an evil abductress. Naturally, we chose prison. The rules were explained – no breaking things, no wresting lights from the ceiling or sockets from the wall, no oil fires – and then we were led into the room.

At this point, the lady in charge told us to get into character and act like we were in prison. Paul look suitably chagrined whilst I immediately skittered a bar of soap along the floor and bent over with a ‘what AM I like’ leer. What can I say, I’m like Pavlov’s dog. Once I’d straightened myself up, tucked my trouser pocket back in and scrubbed off the ‘WING BITCH’ tattoo from my neck, we were on our way.

I can tell you that we escaped, but it was close, with only a few minutes left on the clock. Paul derailed us immediately by finding a key, deciding it wasn’t relevant and putting it away, not realising it was a crucial part of the first clue. We had been given a phone so we can text our ‘captor’ if we got stuck – we only used it three times, and one of those was Paul accidentally ringing her with his buttocks. To be fair, she probably thought the sound of his cheeks slapping together and the odd, low, rasping fart was just his attempt at speaking Icelandic.

After emerging victorious, we were made to stand for a photo with some ‘AREN’T WE CLEVER’ signs – we didn’t buy them because of course, we look awful. We’re not the worst looking people in the world but we just can’t get a good photo together. Between my chins spilling down my chest like an armadillo’s back and Paul’s barely-tuned in eyes, we’re a mess. If we had children, they’d come out looking like Hoggle from Labyrinth viewed through the bottom of a pint glass. Ah well. She did at least have the good grace when taking the photo not to back away too far to get all of our bulk in.

Tuckered out, we headed back to the hotel, dispensed with all our flimflam and ate a very passable mealin the hotel restuarant. Dangerously, we ordered drinks and put them on our room bill rather than paying for it upfront, which made for quite the unpleasant surprise at the end of the trip. REMEMBER: ICELAND = EXPENSIVE.

We slept like logs that night.

Anyway, let’s get this bloody recipe out of the way. You came here for cheesy bacon burger fries and who the f*ck am I to deny you such pleasures? It serves four, easily, or two fatties. I tweaked the recipe from another blog for this one – link right here.I’ve made it SW friendly though.

cheesy bacon burger fries (4)

to make cheesy bacon burger fries you will need:

  • 1kg potatoes
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • half a lettuce, chopped
  • 120g bacon medallions (have I told you how wonderful you are? If not, you are. Also, you can buy our big meat package with bacon!), chopped
  • 400g lean beef mince (just saying, but we also do a smaller meat package, see? Click here for that– you only need to use up a third of the bacon from here!)
  • 3 tbsp tomato sauce (where the syns come from)
  • 3 tbsp passata
  • 1/2 tsp mustard powder
  • 3 tbsp malt vinegar
  • 100g mature reduced fat cheddar (40g being one HEA)
  • 200g quark

to make cheesy bacon burger fries you should:

  • cut the potatoes into chips however you liked them – we cut them into thin fries which worked great. crinkle cut would be even better!
  • cook them however you like – in an actifry (available for £99 for Amazon Prime Members right here), air fryer, halo, oven…however you want!
  • in a small bowl mix together the mustard powder and vinegar and set aside
  • whilst the chips are cooking, heat a large frying pan over a medium-high heat with a little oil and fry the bacon until just cooked
  • add the mince and continue to stir and fry until cooked
  • add the tomato sauce, passata and mustard mix and some salt and pepper to the pan and cook for about 2 minutes
  • when cooked, remove from the heat and keep warm
  • heat the quark in a small saucepan over a medium heat
  • add the cheese and stir regularly, making sure it doesn’t split
  • when the chips are cooked transfer them to a large serving dish
  • sprinkle over the the lettuce, mince and onions and cheese sauce- maybe layer them if you like! we meant to but I was a bit gung-ho

J

Comments

comments

  • bacon
  • dinner
  • Iceland
  • low syn
  • mince
  1. Hey hunz hpe yre OK… Sorry just winding you both up… Much enjoyed. I am one of your followers who reads the main event and then skips the recipe (so ungrateful, I know) But I managed to reach my ‘target’ last year. Gone slightly pear-shaped (literally) but on track – ish (chips, curry sauce and rioja in my hotel room tonight – oh what style!) I have downloaded both of your books, which have given me many a merry chortle when I have really needed one, having my Mum in one Scouse hospital having chemo and as of today my brother in another awaiting a confirmation of a lung cancer diagnosis. Horrible stuff, but reading your bits and bobs has been very helpful for me. A dark sense of humour – which you both have – is a bloody godsend. And for that I thank you both.

    Reply

    • Ah Al! Firstly, thank you for the lovely words and well done for getting to target AND buying our books! 🙂

      I don’t want to dwell on the unfortunate situation with your mum and brother, so just to say that I hope everything turns out as well as can be – we’re always here to provide some light relief. Glad we can help in some way – take care 🙂

      Reply

  2. I have a complaint….you guys are going to get me sacked if you keep writing such funny blogs! I’m sitting at my desk, trying to look suitably serious and engrossed pretending to read an email from a patient….. and I’m proper belly laughing!…..Recipe? what recipe?….I can’t see the screen for crying!

    Reply

    • Haha ooo well we don’t want to get you into trouble! But thank you for the lovely words – we do try! 😀

      Reply

  3. Only just discovered you guys. Recipes look fabulous but your exploits do make me laugh. I will be purchasing your book so that when I need a laugh I know where to turn. Thank you. X

    Reply

  4. Been awake since 3am joined Slimming World yesterday, perhaps it’s the fear of giving up the G & t’s and wine not sure the I came across your book which I have just downloaded. Trying not to Laugh out too loud in case I wake the hubby, and he’s in a different bedroom because of his snoring both ends” Sorry! Anyway love the recipes and your sense of humour guys, reminds us of two guys who lived in Turkey, but have since done a runner to a new country. Keep the humour and stories coming, loving it all.

    Reply

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cheesy bacon burger fries (2024)

FAQs

How many calories is a bacon cheese burger and fries? ›

Nutrition Facts
NutrientValue
Calories1425
Fats79g
Saturated fats
Trans fats
83 more rows

How many calories are in Burger King loaded fries? ›

Energy: 451 calories
Protein9.3g
Carbs52.3g
Fat20.9g

Does in and out put cheese on fries? ›

Customers can also order cheese fries or request for their fries light or if they want them extra crispy they can ask for them to be well done.

How many calories are in cheeseburger and fries? ›

Is there any nutritional benefit to eating cheeseburgers and fries? One meal of a cheeseburger and fries provides 42 grams of protein and about 9 grams of fiber, as well as a small amount of calcium and other vitamins and minerals. It also has over 1,000 calories and 51 grams of fat.

How many carbs are in cheese and bacon fries? ›

Mcdonald's Cheesy Bacon Fries (1 serving) contains 51g total carbs, 47g net carbs, 34g fat, 15g protein, and 560 calories.

How many calories is a large bacon cheese burger? ›

Large Bacon Cheeseburger With Bun And Single Patty With Ketchup And Mustard (1 sandwich) contains 36.8g total carbs, 34.3g net carbs, 30.9g fat, 30.8g protein, and 550 calories.

Does Burger King have cheesy bacon fries? ›

BK KING Fries® Cheese & Bacon.

How many calories are in cheesy loaded fries? ›

Appetizer - Fatz Cafe
Nutrition Facts
For a Serving Size of 1 Serving (100g)
How many calories are in Loaded Cheese Fries? Amount of calories in Loaded Cheese Fries: Calories 1027Calories from Fat 495 (48.2%)
% Daily Value *
How much fat is in Loaded Cheese Fries? Amount of fat in Loaded Cheese Fries: Total Fat 55g-
15 more rows

What is the highest calorie food at Burger King? ›

The Bacon King is also the calorie king

Weighing in as one of the least healthy options at the drive-thru, Burger King's Bacon King sandwich comes out to 2,102 calories, the highest of any fast food burger — and that's without any sides, confirms the chain's website.

Can you order roadkill fries at In-N-Out? ›

Roadkill Fries

When you order roadkill fries from the secret menu for In-N-Out, you're ordering a Flying Dutchman on top of Animal-Style fries.

Who owns In-N-Out? ›

Lynsi Snyder is In-N-Out Burger's billionaire owner and president. She inherited control in 2017 and it remains a private, family-owned business. The reclusive heiress has a $6.7 billion net worth. Here's what we know about her life and empire.

Is In-N-Out healthy? ›

Now present in five US states, the chain records the lowest calorie content per ounce in the entire study and the third lowest amounts of fat and sodium. Considering all health factors, In-N-Out Burger scored an 8.2 on the 10-point scale. The closer these scores are to 10, the better.

How many calories are in 2 eggs? ›

Calories in Eggs. Eggs aren't just delicious, they're also incredibly nutritious. Whether you prefer boiled, scrambled, or poached, eggs are a great source of high quality protein. At just 74 calories per egg (310 kJ), they are one of the healthiest foods you can eat.

How many calories in a bacon cheeseburger and fries? ›

Ruby Tuesday Bacon Cheeseburger With Fries (1 serving) contains 104g total carbs, 94g net carbs, 85g fat, 56g protein, and 1420 calories.

Is Burger King healthier than Five Guys? ›

Burger King came in with the lowest count at 270 calories for a cheeseburger, though a Whopper will cost you 630, according to the nutritional counts on its website. The burger highest in calories is from Five Guys Burgers and Fries. Their regular cheeseburger has a total of 840 calories.

How many calories in a bacon cheeseburger on a bun? ›

1 serving of bacon cheese burger with bun (not including the Side Servings - Swiss Chalet) contains 869 Calories. The macronutrient breakdown is 22% carbs, 51% fat, and 27% protein.

How many calories in a McDonald's bacon cheeseburger? ›

For more delicious burger variations explore the McDonald's burger menu . There are 370 calories in a McDonald's Bacon Cheeseburger.

How many calories are in bacon cheese fries from Wendy's? ›

Wendy's Baconator Fries (1 serving) contains 45g total carbs, 41g net carbs, 28g fat, 14g protein, and 490 calories.

How many calories are in a original bacon and cheese burger box? ›

There are 1165 calories in 1 serve (896 g) of KFC Original Bacon & Cheese Burger Box.

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