These frozen burgers are normally 4 for £2. I saw them today instore with 2 extra free, so 6 for £2 - as shown on the Iceland website. These are good quality big burgers that don't disappear when you cook them. They are all beef - no rusk or filler. Great for a BBQ (if the weather is nice enough...). I stocked up today!
Still can't figure out how Iceland do their images on their website - sorry!
Top comments
Elevation
17 Apr 163#6
2 hours in and no sign of a horse comment yet - you're doing good.
All comments (34)
landros1
17 Apr 161#1
1 1/2 pounds of beef for £2!
Does the really say 100% beef to you?
dairooney to landros1
17 Apr 162#4
Yes.
shabbird
17 Apr 16#2
heat give. great deal. will grab some tomorrow. Thanks
anthony712
17 Apr 162#3
21.3% fat
mcormack to anthony712
17 Apr 16#14
78.7% Non-Fat
whelpin
17 Apr 161#5
NO
Elevation
17 Apr 163#6
2 hours in and no sign of a horse comment yet - you're doing good.
help-me2 to Elevation
17 Apr 16#8
horse would be an improvement you don't want to know whats in these lets just say it's 100% cow
dck to Elevation
18 Apr 16#17
I actually miss those Tesco Value burgers. They were the best tasting "beef" burgers at any price.
They should bring them back as Tesco Finest* Horseburgers. I would certainly buy them.
dairooney
17 Apr 16#7
Yes, well, almost. Sadly just checked ingredients. 99% beef.
Elevation
17 Apr 161#9
Anyone who takes even a passing interest in what's in food knows exactly what's in these (bar the silly library film of 1980's production methods that some sites are still passing off as "the real truth"). But the 100% (or thereabouts) burgers are decent. Just don't bother with the budget ones if you can afford to go higher up.
Iceland 6 burgers @ 99% Beef for £2 for 681g = £2.94/kg
sradmad
17 Apr 16#11
good find op, heat added
djh1975
17 Apr 16#12
I nearly posted this deal until I found 4 quarter pounders at Home Bargains for £1.
mamboboy
17 Apr 162#13
Makes me laugh when people criticise burgers for fat content. Fat is what gives them flavour, just look at wagyu burgers... Aldis ones for example have double the fat these have!
letterboxfortom
17 Apr 16#15
what is in these?
magicmagicj
17 Apr 161#16
not Quorn. cold
scunny to magicmagicj
18 Apr 16#27
Why do meat eaters insist on putting their dead animals in shapes such as this? Surely easier to just bite the corpses !:smirk:
zel69
18 Apr 16#18
If these are quarterpound burgers, why do they normally cost half a pound each?
BigMonster1
18 Apr 16#19
30% horse?
kick_u_in_the_nuts
18 Apr 16#20
make your own - much healthier and you know that the beef has not been kicked around on the factory floor beforehand
ben1979 to kick_u_in_the_nuts
18 Apr 161#21
When was the last time you saw beef kicked around a factory floor? When was the last time you were in a food processing plant? In fact, when was the last time you watched one the anecdotal 80s food preparation/processing videos that gets wheeled out every time someone mentions food? Times have changed, companies are moving on, so should you!
dereklogan7 to kick_u_in_the_nuts
18 Apr 16#31
Better still slaughter them yourself. :sunglasses:
steven24
18 Apr 16#22
I do make my own burgers but I also enjoy them from Iceland heat added good find
g3legacy
18 Apr 16#23
Don't be so naive, animal abuse is rife. Are you seriously suggesting I couldn't find up to date footage of livestock abuse because it only happened in the 80s? Whether you accept it or not, eating cheap meat doesn't really benefit anyone or anything.
ben1979
18 Apr 161#24
But neither is suggesting that every cheap meal deal on here is synonymous with any form animal abuse. Most intelligent forward thinking human beings as aware that animal abuse happens, there have been plenty of documentaries on it over the years addressing this, but companies will have responded to that, made improvements. Should we boycott all processed meat foods then? I am not naive, but I am accepting that when it does occur, it is highlighted in a very big way, very publicly and rightly so! But I would say, in my own opinion, it is happening less and less!
jonspurs
18 Apr 16#25
Standard comments about fat and what not...get a George Foreman Grill then...it was shocking to see the amount that accumulated in the tray from Birds Eye burgers...
startimeash
18 Apr 16#26
scunny
18 Apr 161#28
Voted HOT by the way even though I've not ate meat since the 1980's, A deal is a deal whether people eat it or not. Post a better one if you can find one.
Phila4
18 Apr 16#29
Had these yesterday - very, very nice indeed. I would wholeheartedly recommend.
dereklogan7
18 Apr 161#30
Makes it easier to fit in a roll. Pretty obvious. :sunglasses:
g0z0
18 Apr 16#32
Anybody checked the packaging to see where the meat is sourced from ?
Saw stewing steak in Iceland that came from Botswana - but they made more of the fact it was packed in the UK ...
landros1
18 Apr 16#33
Check out what parts of a cow can be added to "beefburger" and still be labelled as beef.
Same applies to the inclusive list of ingredients for most products.
scunny
18 Apr 16#34
Just like veggie burgers and sausages but we are always questioned on veggie deals by meat eaters.
Opening post
Still can't figure out how Iceland do their images on their website - sorry!
Top comments
All comments (34)
Does the really say 100% beef to you?
They should bring them back as Tesco Finest* Horseburgers. I would certainly buy them.
http://www.hotukdeals.com/deals/frozen-food-items-any-5-for-6-waitrose-2427268
where you could buy 5 packs of 4 burgers @ 99% British Beef [12.2% Fat] for £6 for 5 x 454g = £2.64/kg
Iceland 6 burgers @ 99% Beef for £2 for 681g = £2.94/kg
Saw stewing steak in Iceland that came from Botswana - but they made more of the fact it was packed in the UK ...
Same applies to the inclusive list of ingredients for most products.