Hamburger Restaurants Missoula -
Top Tips To Building A Better Burger
Summer's here and if you're
anything like me, you've already made that annual trip to the store to refill
the propane tank on your backyard grill.One thing I often hear from
guests is that my barbequed burgers actually taste good ... rather than just
being hard and dry as hockey pucks like so many of those traditional family
reunion barbequed hamburgers we've all endured from time to time. In honor of the hallowed
summertime tradition of outdoor cooking, here are some of my favorite tips for
finding your way to Hamburger Heaven in your own backyard.
1) Don't build your burger from
low fat meat. Get a package of ground beef with an 80/20 or even a 70/30 ratio
of meat to fat. The fat keeps it moist and flavorful and drains off during the
cooking process so the calorie count ultimately isn't much higher than the
lower fat varieties ... but the flavor is so much better. Be aware, thought,
that the higher the fat content in your meat, the more the patty will shrink
while cooking. So plan accordingly.
2) For additional flavor, try
mixing ground beef with other ground meats like pork, sausage or lamb. A good
ratio is two parts beef to one part other meat. Also, if you use ground turkey
to save money, keep in mind that turkey is probably one of the least stable
burger materials you can find, so mix it 50/50 with ground beef to keep those
burgers in one piece on the grill.
3) When forming burgers, mix the
ingredients together gently, handle your burger patties as little as possible,
and don't fully compress the meat ... remember, you're not making meatloaf or
meatballs. If you form the raw beef into patties with wet hands, the grease
won't stick to your skin nearly as much.
4) If you like adding extra
things to your ground beef before making patties, make sure to keep the pieces
small. Large chunks of onion or garlic make the patty unstable and more apt to
fall apart while cooking. Be sure to finely chop or grate all added veggies.
5) Some particularly tastyadditions to the burger mix are: freshly ground pepper, minced garlic, finely
chopped onion, Worcestershire sauce, grated carrot, crushed vinegar & salt
potato chips, or soy sauce. I've discovered that burger purists tend to insist
on top-of-the-line ground beef (Sirloin) with nothing added but salt and pepper
(after grilling). Honestly, I love a good, pure burger ... but sometimes it's
fun to add the extras for variety. Also, if you add steak sauce or applesauce
to your burger patties, try mixing in some dry bread crumbs, quick-cooking
oats, or beaten eggs to help stabilize the burgers.
6) Cook over a medium flame
rather than a high one. You want to cook the patties just slow enough to cook
all the way through. You don't want them charred on the outside and a raw mess
on the inside.
7) Don't press down on the
cooking burger patties with your spatula or flip the burger using tongs that
squeeze the burger. You'll just be squeezing out all the delicious juiciness
and leaving behind a much dryer and tougher finished product. Make an
indentation with your thumb in the center of each burger before cooking to help
keep them flat without squishing them under the spatula.
8) Never -- I repeat,
"Never!" -- poke your cooking burger patties with a fork or other
pointy object. It's a guaranteed trip to Hockey Puck Hamburger Land when all
those delicious juices pour out through that hole.
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