What is your favorite burger ? And no, I don't mean restaurant burgers, but rather kind you make at home and add your own touch to. What is inside the meat and on top of the meat ? or even under the meat ? what kind of meat(s) ? what is your favorite type of bun ?
A Nosey Female wants to know, and yes, I am not above stealing your ideas
Bighorn sheep is my favorite burger meat but obtaining it is an issue. Took me 27 years to draw a tag That being said elk/moose would be my next choice then beef.
I bought one of those plastic stuffed burger tools at Menards and putting cheese inside the burger is great. Bacon, onion, thin sliced dill pickle and Dukes mayo to top it off.
Equal parts ground pork, deer, and lean beef. Stuff with good cheese. Slice of sweet onion, German Johnson 'mater, and Duke's mayo. Maybe a strip or two of good bacon. Toasted sourdough bun.
My favorite are brisket burgers ground 80/20 from the trimmings. Season a 1/2 lb. patty with Lawry's and pepper on both sides. I cook them on a raised grid at 450-475* for about five minutes per side then add a slice of cheddar and provolone cheese the last two minutes. Place it on a toasted onion bun spread with mayo. Add red onion, leaf lettuce and garden tomato. No ketchup or mustard for this guy! Throw some chips or fries on the side and I'm good to go.
I think that the burger has to be cooked just right. It's amazing to me, how easy it is to dry them suckers out if you ain't careful.
I really like putting some onion soup mix into the meat and mixing it up, along with some pickled jalapenos, or if in season, some fresh leeks. No onions needed if you put leeks in there!
Lettuce, mater, onion (red is as good as it gets), some mayo and some fresh cracked black pepper. I like cheese...just about any kind of cheese, but Wegman's has a Jalapeno/Cayenne Cheddar that is probably my favorite to put on there.
I don't do anything to burgers other than brush them lightly with oil, add some salt and pepper, and cook. Plain ground beef, no fillers, no other seasonings.
Thin burgers/meat for me ,easy to control I makeemwit moose an brisket mix, frezze on wax paper hell I,been taken to cooking the meat last they cook so quick, like Mr .gfy said, i like a sturdy but softer bun, one thing I always do is build the Sammie, then I wrap in foil ,it hold the heat,moist,and everything! Try it ! And when I say build it ,add every thing u want /let set wrapped in foil 3-5 mins...dam I'm drooling…lettus could be left out for that extra crunch,but everything else wrap it dagmait !
I flip 800 burgers for a place every year in a four hour shift, but I start with frozen Patty's then grill ,flipping one time only ...never ever press, then a minute before they are what I call done..wet pink juicey they go in to a large foil pan with a concentrate of beef base hotazzwater ...from Sam's, a heavy concentrate ! ,the last 5 years or better I have no hair on my hands , gosh flipping a all them burgers its hard to stay metro lol!!
I don't do anything to burgers other than brush them lightly with oil, add some salt and pepper, and cook. Plain ground beef, no fillers, no other seasonings.
The older I get the more I seam to appreciate the less is more when it comes to food. Start with top notch ingredients, season just enough to compliment the quality ingredients and cook to perfection. You simply can't go wrong.
I'd just add, a good bun, thin sliced red onion and tomatoes, bit of mayo and ketchup and you have a good burger.
I grind my moose 80/20 and that's the way I like beef too. Thick 3/4lb patty with salt, pepper and a bit of garlic powder. Grill it hot and fast till medium. Toasted hard roll with cheddar, bacon, fried onions, fried jalapeños, avacado and bbq sauce. It usually ends up so tall it won't stay together, and the juices soak the bun. One of those burgers that once I pick it up, I'm afraid to put it down.
We will be grilling them tonight. Our basic hamburger uses 15-20% fat ground beef, an egg, salt, pepper and a bit of garlic powder. Cook medium rare topped with Swiss cheese, serve on toasted buns with a bit of mayo, lettuce, thinly sliced tomato and red onion. We often switch it up though and add salsa to the meat, green chilies as a topping, etc. I'll do an Italian one that has egg, breadcrumbs, pesto, parsley, garlic, salt and pepper. Top it with provolone with a bit of mayo on focaccia.
Some might consider it blasphemy but I really enjoy a not to thick burger with lots of cheese (pepperjack), onion, bacon, and a fried egg. Sometimes I will even fry up some lunch meat and throw that on there too. Kind of like a breakfast sandwich/burger combo in one. I love those things.
A close second would be a homemade juicy lucy though.
We had an EMS cookout and grilled up a bunch of burgers that were 85% ground chuck. Seasoned up the meat with salt n' pepper and some minced onions. Had plenty of mushrooms, caramelized onions, Swiss and sharp chedders slices, dill pickle slices, ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise, and Miracle Whip (for those who like it), tomatoes and lettuce. And for buns we used grilled cheese sandwiches...! One for the top bun and one for the bottom bun. It was a flippin' feast and those folks got their grub on...!
BTW, a really good sauce for burgers is made by mixing Tabasco Chipotle Sauce and mayonnaise.
When I make em' at home, I like to use big, freshly baked rolls from the bakery (cut em' in half with a bread knife) for the buns.
What is your favorite burger ? And no, I don't mean restaurant burgers, but rather kind you make at home and add your own touch to. What is inside the meat and on top of the meat ? or even under the meat ? what kind of meat(s) ? what is your favorite type of bun ?
A Nosey Female wants to know, and yes, I am not above stealing your ideas
Well, Miss Lynn, I have come to the point where I don't much care for beef burger anymore. I mix my venison 80-20 venison to pork shoulder and then when I want to make burgers I add either a whole green chorizo or half of one per pound of burger meat depending on the heat level of the chorizo. Sometimes the chorizo has a lot of heat sometimes not. I think the serranos vary quite a bit, and can be more than I can handle. To make them a little more decadent add some Oaxaca cheese cut into small chunks.
If you have to eat beef, then it needs to be round, flank or brisket carefully trimmed and ground and then mixed with the pork and chorizo.
Well, finally back from camp and got photo bucket to work. Perhaps more about sketchy connectivity than the app itself but again I reiterate 100% Newfie Moose and some home made onion rings (well, OK, sharp cheddar!)
80/20 medium rare ketchup then raw onion on bottom bun burger cheese grilled onion cheese dill pickle slices mayo or miracle whip mixed with A1 on top bun bunch of napkins enjoy!!! No I am not OCD about my burgers
Some do, but I cook quite a few briskets so I keep the trimmings, weigh the fat/meat and grind it myself. I just use a Kitchen Aid mixer/grinder which works fine for trimmings, but you would burn it up on a whole brisket. A really good combo is a 50/50 mix of ground 80/20 beef and ground pork. You have to babysit them so they're not under cooked, but the results are pretty amazing.
A chuck roast fresh ground twice..... make 6oz patties....using about three knuckles, make a depression in the middle (to 1/2 inch) to keep the burgers from puffing up when they are grilled...medium rare....before you take off the grill, top with scallions and sauteed mushrooms in garlic, butter and red wine....and provolone...lightly toast inside of buns and spread with just a little mayo.
1 1/4 cups all purpose flour 1 Tsp of salt 1 Tsp baking soda Enough Buttermilk to make the mixture liquid. Usually 2 cups is about right Panko Bread crumbs 1 Medium/large onion is enough for 2 people sliced into 1/4" thick rounds and separated into rings Submerge the rings in batter then pull out and roll in the Panko and set on a wire rack to rest for 10 minutes.
Fry in the oil of choice (I use Canola) at 375 degrees (degrees F ya darn Canucks! ) until golden brown and delicious. I drain them on a wire rack and keep the rack in the oven to keep warm until the whole batch is done.
Idaho last summer. Simple salt, pepper, touch of Worcester and garlic powder. Linguica as the appetizer, green chilies and sharp Tillamook cheddar as the topper.
Idaho last summer. Simple salt, pepper, touch of Worcester and garlic powder. Linguica as the appetizer, green chilies and sharp Tillamook cheddar as the topper.
That's what is I'm talking 'bout, Ed. Gin, chiles, and linguicia, onions, and meat. Local store sells linguicia in four inch rounds like thick cut balogna. Makes one hell of a double burger.
Mixed some 80/20 beef with and equal amount of pure ground elk a bit ago seasoned with some salt/pepper. Will garnish with smoked gouda, sweet onion and roasted ancho peppers from my garden in a bit