and I have some hand-pattied burgers to grill.
Is there a different way to make burgers to grill? I have seen those frozen patties in the store, but I always assumed that people use them for playing frisbee with their dogs.
and I have some hand-pattied burgers to grill.
I think it's about time for some grilled kangaroo steaks this upcoming weekend!
Is there a different way to make burgers to grill? I have seen those frozen patties in the store, but I always assumed that people use them for playing frisbee with their dogs.
Is there a different way to make burgers to grill? I have seen those frozen patties in the store, but I always assumed that people use them for playing frisbee with their dogs.
We generally make stuffed burgers so no burger presses for me. 1 pound homeground beef, make 4 thin patties, put whatever you want in the middle of two of the patties, cover with the other two, crimp the edges REALLY well, flatten out, grill. Yum.
I line the burger presses with plastic wrap, so no mess. Helps use an even amount each time & about the same size.
I line the burger presses with plastic wrap, so no mess. Helps use an even amount each time & about the same size.
I like the way plastic wrap forms itself more easily to the mold.
Wax paper and two plates.... Same ****.
Season meat, Roll meat into even sized balls, Form:
plate>wax paper>meatball>wax paper>plate. Squish to desired thickness. Best technique for having all uniform burgers.
I have a cast iron griddle that's a grill on one side, & a flat griddle on the other. Or the bbq pit, depending on the weather.
My burger technique would probably piss you all off. Ground chuck, salt, pepper and adobo go into a bowl. I work the meat just a little to make sure the fat is melted into the lean. Now that the meat is mixed with the seasonings I put a blob in the center of my palm about the size of a half-dollar and use my other hand to squash it into what looks like a meat pancake. The edges are a little bit thinner than the center. Now the real horror begins... I don't use a grill, I use a flat griddle on the stove with a dab of vegetable oil to keep it from sticking. The edges and outside of the burger (as well as the cheese) is quite well done, but the center is juicy and pink. A pickle, dab of mayo, dab of mustard, and squirt of ketchup on a potato bun and its complete.
Flame away.
You people not taking photos to accompany your posts are NOT satisfying my need for food porn! Tighten up! Like this...kids first day of track out from school and both officially in middle school, so Dad makes biscuits, sausage and gravy. (Okay, didn't MAKE the sausage...I just cooked it.)
I made the biscuits from a recipe I got off pintrest that originally came from King Arthur Flour. I believe it was 2 c. Self-rising flour, 1/2 stick butter and 2/3 to 3/4 c. Milk or half'n'half...or buttermilk. Work the butter into the flour, add liquid and stir until it just comes together. Roll out on floured surface, 3/4" thick. Cut in rounds 2-3". Bake @ 425f until lightly browned, about 12 to 20 minutes,depending on size. Brush with melted butter.I would love this recipe..
I made the biscuits from a recipe I got off pintrest that originally came from King Arthur Flour. I believe it was 2 c. Self-rising flour, 1/2 stick butter and 2/3 to 3/4 c. Milk or half'n'half...or buttermilk. Work the butter into the flour, add liquid and stir until it just comes together. Roll out on floured surface, 3/4" thick. Cut in rounds 2-3". Bake @ 425f until lightly browned, about 12 to 20 minutes,depending on size. Brush with melted butter.
The gravy is made after cooking sausage and using equal amounts of sausage grease and flour to form a roux over low heat in the same pan you cooked the sausage. Add fresh black pepper and salt o taste, then you use a wire whip to stir as you add milk or half'n'half...I eyeball it, but probably about 2 cups. Whisk to eliminate any lumps and raise the temp and bring to a boil. If it gets too thick, add more milk. Chop a piece of sausage well and add to the gravy.
I hope that helps!
My biscuit recipe is one my grandma helped my mother to devize. Mom was Slovak & dad was country, so she didn't know what biscuits AKA shortnin' bread was.
4C flour
1/2C butter or margarine
1tsp salt
2-3tsp baking powder
cut together with fork or pastry cutter.
Then add;
not quite 2C of buttermilk.Stir till a soft, sticky dough forms. The old timers always told me that the sloppier the dough is, the better the biscuits. Roll out 3/4 to 1" thick, & cut 2 1/2 to 3" diameter. Bake in 500F oven about 10-13 minutes.
Though I am still a fat = flavor person with meats so 80/20 or fattier for me.
I wouldn't feed moldy frisbees to any dog I loved, that's for sure!
I've never made patties with other than my hands, I don't press any magic dimples into the center of them, and mine don't turn out to be meatballs on the grill. Then again, I only buy ground beef that has less than 10% fat, so that might have something to do with it. Or not. Who knows!
My burger technique would probably piss you all off. Ground chuck, salt, pepper and adobo go into a bowl. I work the meat just a little to make sure the fat is melted into the lean. Now that the meat is mixed with the seasonings I put a blob in the center of my palm about the size of a half-dollar and use my other hand to squash it into what looks like a meat pancake. The edges are a little bit thinner than the center. Now the real horror begins... I don't use a grill, I use a flat griddle on the stove with a dab of vegetable oil to keep it from sticking. The edges and outside of the burger (as well as the cheese) is quite well done, but the center is juicy and pink. A pickle, dab of mayo, dab of mustard, and squirt of ketchup on a potato bun and its complete.
Flame away.
Sounds good, actually! If I can't use my grill, I will definitely use a nice, heavy pan and fry up some patties. I like making my fried burgers extremely thin, as the crust it forms tastes really nice, and I'll stack 2 (sometimes 3) to a bun. I'd guesstimate that one patty = 1/8 of an ounce.
Sounds good, actually! If I can't use my grill, I will definitely use a nice, heavy pan and fry up some patties. I like making my fried burgers extremely thin, as the crust it forms tastes really nice, and I'll stack 2 (sometimes 3) to a bun. I'd guesstimate that one patty = 1/8 of an ounce.