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re: I'm cooking burgers tonight...

Posted on 10/28/14 at 11:45 am to
Posted by NOFOX
New Orleans
Member since Jan 2014
9963 posts
Posted on 10/28/14 at 11:45 am to
quote:

cook to desired temp (I prefer med-rare) without moving it around or pressing on it

If you cook in cast iron or on a griddle, you should press down firmly as soon as it goes on the cooking surface to get a nice crust on the patty. (Shake shack, smash burger, Company Burger, Tru Burger...etc.)

Smashing Burger
Posted by LouisianaLady
Member since Mar 2009
81295 posts
Posted on 10/28/14 at 11:49 am to
Meh. I can see where pressing when you first put it onto the heat can be fine because there's no liquid fat to smash the hell out of, but going "diner style" (smashing the burger throughout the entirety of cooking whilst endlessly flipping) seems eeek to me.

quote:

If you don't want to lose juices, you must smash within the first 30 seconds of cooking. When ground beef is cold, its fat is still solid and its juices are still held firmly in place inside small, chopped up segments of muscle fibers. That's the reason why you can push and press on ground meat without squeezing out too much liquid, and the reason why you can smash a burger during the initial phases of cooking without fear of losing moisture.


Yeah, your article said the same thing.
This post was edited on 10/28/14 at 11:51 am
Posted by Lester Earl
Member since Nov 2003
279246 posts
Posted on 10/28/14 at 11:56 am to
Best way to do it. Form into ball, put ball on hot! cast iron that was some sea salt sprinkled on it. Press down to desired thickness. Season top end. Flip once, season other end. Great burger
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