Review - Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers

Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers

As a few of you in the chilehead world already know, the Red Robin Gourmet Burger chain has introduced two new products this past week that contain the heat bhut jolokia AKA ghost chile peppers. This may be the first time a national, non-chicken wing chain use any type of ghost pepper sauce or condiment on one or more of their menu items.

Red Robin's "Red Royalty" promotional club members first got word of this in emails (as did I) which advertised not one, but two gourmet hamburgers. First is the more mild Cry Baby Style, with ghost pepper ketchup, pepper jack cheese and friend onion straws. Second is the slightly more blazing Fiery Ghost Style, with ghost pepper sauce, pepper jack cheese, plus both fried and fresh jalapeno slices. Both are double burgers.

Although the e-mail implied that a print-out of itself was possibly necessary to take advantage of either of the spicy burger offers, I later found out that the availability was for everybody would walked into a Red Robin. In a laminated insert inside the regular menu, there they were:

Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers

Although the wait staff gave me sufficient warning as to how blistering these menu items, I did not expect these to be too terribly hot. And upon biting into both, they were not at the upper end of the heat scale.

But there were some positives. Both were very tasty burgers, with juicy, succulent meat, and containing the right amount of melted pepper jack cheese. The fried onion straws added incredibly appealing texture and flavor to the Cry Baby Style. While I normally don't go ga-ga over ketchup on a hamburger, the ghost pepper ketchup add a nice zing and creaminess to the sandwich. I also dug the presence of the duel fried/fresh jalapeno coverage. While they did little to nothing to up the heat level, the peppers did offer a good crunchy texture.

Any negatives? Well, the ghost pepper sauce wasn't anything to write home about. (I got a side of both the ghost pepper sauce and ghost pepper ketchup for individual testing and dipping.) The sauce (not the ketchup) had a basic, bland and almost "dark" aspect to it. I wouldn't so far as to say it tasted "gritty" or "smoky", but I could tell that it had that dried, ground chile pepper feel to it. It had a bit of heat to it (probably at the lower end of a good habanero sauce), but the flavor of just the ghost pepper sauce alone I would rate 2.5 out of 5.

Another thumbs down were the french fries. Now I love me some nice, thick-cut steak fries, but Red Robin's fries have that nasty ability to lose all eatability when they drop in temperature from piping-hot to lukewarm. Still, they were partially redeemed when dipped into the ghost pepper ketchup.

Well, what's my final verdict? I wasn't expecting Red Robin to make these for the hardcore chileheads out there and instead cater to the masses who want a little bit of a burn when it's time to go out with the gang for a juicy burger. On that level, they have succeeded. I actually liked the lesser-heat flavor of the Cry Baby Burger because of the onion straws.

Ratings

Cry Baby Style - Overall Flavor - 4.0 stars Heat - 2.0 stars

Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Overall Flavor - 3.0 stars Heat - 2.5 stars

Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers
The Cry Baby Style, with ghost pepper ketchup, pepper jack cheese and friend onion straws.

Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers
The Fiery Ghost Style, with ghost pepper sauce, pepper jack cheese, plus both fried and fresh jalapeno slices.

Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers
A few bites into eating the Fiery Ghost Style Burger at Red Robin.

Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers
Inside Red Robin's Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burger: ghost pepper sauce on tne top bun above the lettuce, fried & breaded jalapenos beneath the tomatoes, and fresh jalapenos.

Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers
I wanted more of the ghost pepper ketchup on the Cry Baby Style Burger!

Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers
Sides of Red Robin's ghost pepper sauce (left) and ghost pepper ketchup

Red Robin Cry Baby Style and Fiery Ghost Pepper Style Burgers
The ghost pepper ketchup was great with fries! Not too hot, but it was still a worthy spicy condiment.


Related Articles:
Spicy Food Reviews - Hot Sauce Reviews, Hot Snacks, Hot Wings, Seasonings, BBQ Sauces, Condiments, and More




     Comments

Comment NIck1987
2012-06-22 19:56:18
Great photos, Scott.
Comment Robert Crabtree
2012-06-22 20:36:27
Just tried it today, but I was a little different than Scott. I had the Fiery Ghost Style burger. As Scott stated, the heat was not what I expected from a Ghost Chile burger. I also added extra sauce to the burger. The only downfall I found to the burger was the fresh jalapeno's. They did nothing to add heat to the burger, and the flavor of them over powered the rest of the burger. Over all though I was happy with the burger. Will have to try the Cry Baby Burger next time.
Comment Ryan Graub
2012-06-22 21:01:09
I wanted to try these. But, I figured they wouldn't be too hot due the fact that their Burning Love burger wasn't even hot. Not to mention, Red Robin is a chain and big companies never deliver when they say something is hot.
Comment Chris Hoeper
2012-06-24 12:04:35
Tried the Fiery Ghost Style today after getting the Red Robin email this week. I agree with the heat level in the review. It was nice to finally have at least a little zing from a chain restaurant food for once. Taste was great as well, I'd definitely get it again.

I'll have to try the Cry Baby version next time. I did get the Ghost Pepper ketchup that comes on it as the dip for my fries. Tasty!
Comment Venom
2012-06-25 20:39:36
Nice review and possibly the best photo work I have ever seen on a food review site.
Comment Marcie, Red Robin Gourmet Burgers
2012-06-26 17:24:23
Need some more heat? We'll gladly double up those jalapenos and Ghost Pepper sauce for you... YUMMM!

Thanks for checking out our new Cry Baby & Fiery Ghost Styles, and we look forward to seeing all Chileheads soon!

Marcie
Red Robin Gourmet Burgers
Comment Chris
2012-06-28 17:48:58
Interesting, had not heard of these, but I have never eaten at the area Red Robyn's either.
Comment Pete
2012-06-29 13:16:18
I tried the Fiery Ghost style burger today, and was pretty dissapointed. I do have a pretty good tolerance to heat, but this was really mild. I asked for some of the sauce on the side, and they gave me the paste. I tried it, and then had one of the guys I work with, that doesn't like spicey food try it, and he didn't think it was hot.

Other than that, the burger was really tastey. I'd get it again, but only because I thought it was delicious.
Comment salsalady
2012-07-08 19:34:27
By chance, the kid and I stopped in at Red Robin today for a snack and ordered a side of the ghost sauce with the chips and guac. The kid dove right in to the ghost sauce with me and we both said....not hot~~~~
tasted like catsup and bbq sauce with some ghost pepper in there. We could taste the ghost chiles, but definitely not hot. It's chain-restaurant spicy, that's all. Better than nothing, I suppose, for chileheads
Comment Amy
2012-07-16 10:55:29
So, I was reading, scrolling really and came to the end of your post and noticed right smack below the photo that you have an ad for Chili's. I bet Red Robin would not be pleased by that one. Cheers!
Comment Scott Roberts
2012-07-16 11:15:31
Amy, it does not bother me what Red Robin's thinks, as this was an independent and unbiased review.:-) Besides, the ad spot you're referring to uses Google AdSense, and based on their algorithm will display different ads that I have no control over. Have a wonderful day!
Comment Andy C
2012-08-05 15:38:41
Try the BIG tavern version of the fiery ghost. It was much hotter than the standard double version, maybe because of the larger volume of jalapenos and more surface area for the pepper sauce. I had the BIG version on my first trip and it got me sweating but the standard version I had a week later really didn't hold any heat. Go figure.

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