Finally, a new thread about food at the zoo.
I don't know how other ZooChatters feel about zoo gastronomy, but I myself absolutely HAVE to try at least a few items at each place I go. In general I am a very adventurous food enthusiast. I love trying anything I can get my hands on. I'm also a big fan of vegetarian/vegan options in zoos and always will try them out, just to see how they taste. So far I haven't been disliking a single veggie/vegan option!
I visited both Artis and Safari Park Beekse Bergen this week so I can give some fresh opinions, as well as frequenting Burgers' Zoo and having tried their entire menu, I am more then ready to give my deep fried oponions about food at the zoo!
First I'll talk about something many people find important; prices.
I often see people complain food at the zoo is expensive, and it is. That's just the truth. It is expensive to buy lunch or dine. However for a zoo this is one of the main money makers. So with sentiment I understand the prices. Being a solo-zoogoer also makes prices a lot more tolerable! Although I have to say that the 7 ice tea bottles I bought today did quite dent my wallet, but it was too hot to not have a drink with me. Each bottle being somewhat in the 3 euro price range. Normally I buy 1 or 2 drinks at a zoo but today was exceptionally warm and a lot of direct sunlight. I visited the Beekse Bergen.
Generally when I look at prices I also look at what quality I am receiving.
When I visited the Rotterdam Zoo not too long ago I got myself a summer special deal which was a large portion of fries with vegetarian (tofu) chicken with serundeng, baked crispy onions, spring onion and parsley as garnish.
Alongside it I got a pretty basic, and with that in my opinion a rather cheap, hamburger with some basic greenery on top and pickles.
Here's a photo I dug up from my camera roll of the food. I took one because I was generally speaking very excited about the fries, the hamburger less so.
Now these fries are still to this day one of the best foods I have had at a zoo. Absolutely loved them. The loaded fries with the spices and the tofu absolutely made my day a lot better. I had just found out that my camera battery was not fully charged at home and I only packed 1 with me, so I got a bit into a sad moment but the food made it better.
The hamburger I am avoiding intentionally because I find it to be a rather standard burger. It's not bad but nothing special either, it's just nice.
And just nice, is good for me as well.
I only found a convenient photo I took of the loaded fries sign (cause I wanted to remember the ingredients) and the price for the loaded fries is 7,15 euros.
Compared with Burgers' , which prices their fries around the 4-5 euro mark, they are more expensive, however you do get a rather generous portion, by far the largest I've had, and it's loaded with stuff!
Too bad this was a summer special and not a permanent item...
Now for my Artis experience;
At the restaurant adjecent to the Savanna is where I lunched, to my surprise they went with a more fast-food like approach in how you order your food. Instead of a self-service or ordering at a desk you got a few of these order screen television thingies. Technology.
Ofcourse this is not at Artis but the Mac Donalds. But you get the idea.
I quite like these as it makes ordering food less stressful as I do like taking my time to browse through all the items.
In the end I tried their vegetarian/vegan (? i'm not sure which of the two) burger.
I quite liked it, it had a bit of a spice mix to bring it to flavor, but it worked well. I'm not sure if I would prefer these burgers over the beyond meat burgers or such but they satisfy a hungry stumach, except for that of a real carnivore, I guess...
As a side I had a regular portion of salt-deprived fries and a bio-ketchup as well as a (homemade?) lemonade that was quite nice, but a very different experience compared to any other zoo I have been to. Particularly because Artis themselves made the change in all their gastronomy to only server vegetarian and vegan food items.
Something I feel that works rather well in a educational facility which displays endangered species because of habitat encroachment due to our need of food, often for meat industry.
However this might be a whole different debate of its own on whether or not zoos should serve vegetarian/vegan-only.
Pricewise Artis drained me of €16,65 for a lunch consisting of;
- Vegetarian hamburger
- Fries + ketchup
- Ice tea bottle to-go
- A refreshing lemonade
Not too bad if you ask me!
Could always be worse, much worse
Now for my Beekse Bergen experience;
I need to first come clean about a sin I comitted today. I didn't try much food due to a lack of hunger with all the heat from today.
So I only ended up with a portion of fries and chicken nuggets, which in my opinion were the most dreadful ones I've ever had... You could knock out a guineafowl with one of those rocks.
The fries were nice, the nuggets went down in the end, but it was definitely so far not my best zoo food experience. Previously I've found every place I ate at to be quite alright. Perhaps my standards are too low

One thing I do need to credit the Beekse Bergen for is the way they offer everything in multiple different foodtrucks scattered around a central seating area. I quite like this approach.
I did ofcourse look at their menu items, and they do offer a great variety of foods. There was a truck with ''African pizzas'', at a restaurant a assortment of sandwiches with pulled pork, grilled chicken and other stuff, on top of the basic fried stuff and burgers. So there's no lack in options at the zoo! Just unfortunate I couln't really get myself to eat something.
Prices did look pretty standard, so can't say it was really expensive or cheap compared to other places I've been before.
But the best place in my opinion in the Netherlands serving food at the zoo has to be Burgers'.
And yes, their namesake item is on the menu, and they slap.
At the Park Restaurant there's both beef burger and green-bean based veggie burgers available.
Both of them are great, though I personally am more fond of the veggie burger due to the mix of grilled vegetables that come with it. In the Safari restaurant there's fried chicken burgers.
Besides burgers and fries there's also a variaty in sandwiches suitable for breakfast, lunch or even afternoon. There's rich salads and homemade soups available for those seeking a more healthy option.
The price at Burgers however is a bit higher compared to other zoos I visited, however I do personally believe that the quality, which is higher compared to other places, most definitely justifies this.
Anyways I'll end it on this. Especially cause nobody really ever asked for this sloppy and greasy long post about food in Dutch Zoos....
But yes I do like spending money on zoo food, just to try new stuff and such.
Also I am incredibly lazy when it comes to packing my own lunches.....