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> Can you make a better burger than this recipe?, The perfect.
Bacardi
post Nov 3 2007, 09:44 AM
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I'm offering a friendly challenge in hopes to gain some great tasting recipe! I have putting garlic powder and worcestershire on burgers since I've been 10, I've tweaked this concept over the years. I have people who come over and beg me to make these burgers.

The perfect:

Assuming 1/4lb, adjust accordingly for different weights.

80/20 chuck ground.
3 tablespoon worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon course or kosher salt

Put everything into a bowl and mix it with your hands. Once you incorperate all ingredients you're ready to cook, try not to over mix it.

Use kaiser roll you got from the bakery section of the supermarket, do not get the preservative-fill nissian rolls. Melt butter in the microwave and put a layer of melted butter on the top and bottom of the rolls.

You WILL LOVE these burgers!


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JAB
post Jun 29 2008, 06:25 PM
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Try adding a little terriyaki sauce, some italian bread crumbs, black pepper, a dash or 2 of adobo and some chopped vidalia or sweet onions. I don't know exact amounts I just add the ingrediants that you use and this until it looks right. Next time I make them I'll try and get more exact amounts. I always get compliments on them.
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cuskit
post Jun 29 2008, 07:18 PM
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QUOTE (JAB @ Jun 29 2008, 07:25 PM) *
Try adding a little terriyaki sauce, some italian bread crumbs, black pepper, a dash or 2 of adobo and some chopped vidalia or sweet onions. I don't know exact amounts I just add the ingrediants that you use and this until it looks right. Next time I make them I'll try and get more exact amounts. I always get compliments on them.

JAB & Bacardi,

Both of these sound great! Maybe you forgot - we had a great thread going on this subject time back - it would be nice to revive it again, especially just before the July 4th weekend, seeing as that's probably the most popular meat at most backyard celebrations!

http://www.bbqsource-forums.com/invboard/i...post&p=3750

Mike


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Dapipes2
post Jun 29 2008, 08:24 PM
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QUOTE (Bacardi @ Nov 3 2007, 07:44 AM) *
I'm offering a friendly challenge in hopes to gain some great tasting recipe! I have putting garlic powder and worcestershire on burgers since I've been 10, I've tweaked this concept over the years. I have people who come over and beg me to make these burgers.

The perfect:

Assuming 1/4lb, adjust accordingly for different weights.

80/20 chuck ground.
3 tablespoon worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon course or kosher salt

Put everything into a bowl and mix it with your hands. Once you incorperate all ingredients you're ready to cook, try not to over mix it.

Use kaiser roll you got from the bakery section of the supermarket, do not get the preservative-fill nissian rolls. Melt butter in the microwave and put a layer of melted butter on the top and bottom of the rolls.

You WILL LOVE these burgers!

The only thing I might suggest is something I saw on a cooking show that I do all the time. When you form the patties, dig a hole with your fingers in the center. Deep as you can without breaking thru to the other side. Then jam a pat of butter in the hole and cover it up. This will ensure that your burger is always juicy inside, even if you overcook it a little.

ps.....please feel free to completely trash this message. Look at my post count unsure.gif
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Bacardi
post Jun 30 2008, 07:28 AM
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QUOTE (Dapipes2 @ Jun 29 2008, 09:24 PM) *
The only thing I might suggest is something I saw on a cooking show that I do all the time. When you form the patties, dig a hole with your fingers in the center. Deep as you can without breaking thru to the other side. Then jam a pat of butter in the hole and cover it up. This will ensure that your burger is always juicy inside, even if you overcook it a little.

ps.....please feel free to completely trash this message. Look at my post count unsure.gif


Lol. The impression also helps with middle not rising 4" tall. IMO, the butter is needed if you plan on cooking well done. If you use 80/20 patties and cook below well done, extra fat will make a minimal difference. Butter will change the flavor. If I were going to do, I think I'd complete melt the butter and work it into the meat before forming patties, that way the butter seasons the meat evenly all the way through smile.gif


--------------------
Ultimate $500 setup:
Uniflame Gold (avatar)
Ultra Sear IR
Masterbuilt digitially controlled smoker

Formerly owned and returned:
Sears Crossray IR (couldn't get it started)
Weber One Touch Silver (charcoal doesn't fit my lifestyle)
Fiesta Blue Ember (warped/melted all burners)
CB TEC (low temps)
CB H20 electric smoker (sold)
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Dapipes2
post Jun 30 2008, 10:20 AM
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QUOTE (Bacardi @ Jun 30 2008, 05:28 AM) *
Lol. The impression also helps with middle not rising 4" tall. IMO, the butter is needed if you plan on cooking well done. If you use 80/20 patties and cook below well done, extra fat will make a minimal difference. Butter will change the flavor. If I were going to do, I think I'd complete melt the butter and work it into the meat before forming patties, that way the butter seasons the meat evenly all the way through smile.gif

Maybe I've been using the butter trick all along because of my wife. If there's any pink at all in any meat I cook, she goes nuts! So I always make hers very well done!
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pragmatic
post Jun 30 2008, 01:43 PM
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QUOTE (Bacardi @ Nov 3 2007, 09:44 AM) *
I'm offering a friendly challenge in hopes to gain some great tasting recipe! I have putting garlic powder and worcestershire on burgers since I've been 10, I've tweaked this concept over the years. I have people who come over and beg me to make these burgers.

The perfect:

Assuming 1/4lb, adjust accordingly for different weights.

80/20 chuck ground.
3 tablespoon worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon course or kosher salt

Put everything into a bowl and mix it with your hands. Once you incorperate all ingredients you're ready to cook, try not to over mix it.

Use kaiser roll you got from the bakery section of the supermarket, do not get the preservative-fill nissian rolls. Melt butter in the microwave and put a layer of melted butter on the top and bottom of the rolls.

You WILL LOVE these burgers!


I've used a variation of this off and on, but will try this exact recipe this weekend. It sounds simple and delicious...and I'll have to agree that NOT over mixing the ground is very important.

Thanks for posting!


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killerdoberman
post Jul 2 2008, 08:21 AM
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I usually don't measure , but I use pretty much the same recipe. However, I ground my own chuck and DON'T over mix it!!

We are making hamburgers, not meatloaf. Over mixing breaks down the fat TOO much, and as a result can burn off too quick and over dry the burgers.

Another, tip for the beginner...make a thinner burger. If you want HUGE, then make a big round, thin burger and stack 'em. Overly thick burgers are a bit touchy, especially when you mix the meat by hand.


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Green
post Jul 2 2008, 10:41 AM
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I have been waiting for someone to chime in with our frequent addition to a grilled Hamburger. But no one has - so here goes what we believe is a very simple but really tasty - single addition.

Gorgonzola Cheese. (The Italian Blue Cheese)

You can get it in chunks some places, but it is more commonly available as a "crumbled" cheese in small tubs which helps to insure your purchase will be fresh when you buy it and fresh while you use it in smaller quantities.

For those of you who are not familiar with it - it is simply a blue type cheese with early Italian roots. I won't get into the claims I've heard of who really started blue cheese first - I'm Irish and just love Italian food.

But we find it to be smoother and a little less "blue" than the typical store bought blue cheese, let alone Roquefort.

Pretty simple - fold it deep into the center of the Hamburger. Make sure you don't leave any/too much exposed to the surface as it will melt and start a flare up if excessive.

The white part of the cheese is very buttery in texture and taste and the blue has that little "zing". Simply wonderful.

You can certainly add a little ground pepper melange on the outside is you like. We find that salt becomes unnecessary. Onions superfluous.
Ketchup (Catsup if you like ) - just a little please.

You can go right to medium well and even well done (I like Med rare myself - but it is a litttle dangerous) and still have a very moist burger!

Anyone else share this love of Gorgonzola?
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Bacardi
post Jul 2 2008, 05:15 PM
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I've tried blue cheese burgers four times. Did what I thought was a perfect job sealing the meat around the cheese, but three times all most of them leak...The one time I did get most burgers leak free, people said it was a "nice" change, but said next time to use my previous recipe I posted above.


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Ultimate $500 setup:
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Ultra Sear IR
Masterbuilt digitially controlled smoker

Formerly owned and returned:
Sears Crossray IR (couldn't get it started)
Weber One Touch Silver (charcoal doesn't fit my lifestyle)
Fiesta Blue Ember (warped/melted all burners)
CB TEC (low temps)
CB H20 electric smoker (sold)
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Green
post Jul 7 2008, 07:53 AM
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QUOTE (Bacardi @ Jul 2 2008, 05:15 PM) *
I've tried blue cheese burgers four times. Did what I thought was a perfect job sealing the meat around the cheese, but three times all most of them leak...The one time I did get most burgers leak free, people said it was a "nice" change, but said next time to use my previous recipe I posted above.


I shall try your recipe my next grill this week. I am not a huge fan of worcestershire sauce, but the three tablespoons does not seem a lot.

And about the cheese gooing out - it's a wothwhile sacrifice.................. You just have to watch the flare ups.

No grilling this past weekend. Our first Granddaughter arrived July 5th.

She got ALL the attention !!!
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bluesin
post Jul 7 2008, 09:14 AM
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We do blue-cheese burgers all the time and they are great, we also like to mix in some fresh jalapeno peppers or other peppers also.

Hamburger takes to fresh spices and whatnot very very well. I normally cook my burgers on my Big Green Egg and as far as Worcestershire sauce I just usually douse my burgers and the fire with it while I'm cooking, this produces a nice Worcestershire smoke that gives the burgers a great flavor...

Bluesin


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MassBBQ
post Jul 7 2008, 04:47 PM
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QUOTE (Dapipes2 @ Jun 30 2008, 11:20 AM) *
Maybe I've been using the butter trick all along because of my wife. If there's any pink at all in any meat I cook, she goes nuts!


That would necessitate a divorce as far as I'm concerned ... tongue.gif


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Uncle Bob
post Jul 21 2008, 06:56 AM
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QUOTE (Bacardi @ Nov 3 2007, 10:44 AM) *
I'm offering a friendly challenge in hopes to gain some great tasting recipe! I have putting garlic powder and worcestershire on burgers since I've been 10, I've tweaked this concept over the years. I have people who come over and beg me to make these burgers.

The perfect:

Assuming 1/4lb, adjust accordingly for different weights.

80/20 chuck ground.
3 tablespoon worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon course or kosher salt

Put everything into a bowl and mix it with your hands. Once you incorperate all ingredients you're ready to cook, try not to over mix it.

Use kaiser roll you got from the bakery section of the supermarket, do not get the preservative-fill nissian rolls. Melt butter in the microwave and put a layer of melted butter on the top and bottom of the rolls.

You WILL LOVE these burgers!


Hi Barcardi -

My mother came over this past weekend and I told her I would grill her anything she wanted. She said wanted a nice burger. I used your recipe and my mom went nuts! She said it was the best burger she had ever had and that I turned out OK as a son. Thanks for a winning burger recipe.


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physeek
post Jul 21 2008, 09:49 AM
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That's 1/4 lb. per burger, and your mixing those ingredients into the entire 1 lb. of meat correct?

I find worcestershire sauce is strong and a surprising small amount is noticeable in recipes
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