Best Burger

User Reviews

5.0

15 reviews
Excellent
  • Prep Time

    50 mins

  • Additional Time

    2 d 1 hr

  • Total Time

    2 d 2 hrs

  • Servings

    16 burgers

  • Calories

    610 kcal

  • Course

    Main Course

  • Cuisine

    American

Best Burger

This best burger got its name for very good reasons. It's made with a mix of short ribs, brisket, and chuck for an incredibly juicy burger experience that's rich and lovely enough to serve naked. Although, you can dress it with your favorite condiments if you must.

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Ingredients

Servings
  • 4 1/2 pounds chuck untrimmed
  • 3 1/2 pounds brisket untrimmed
  • 3 pounds short ribs untrimmed
  • 4 tablespoons Morton's kosher salt OR 5 tablespoons of Diamond kosher salt
  • hamburger buns
  • cheese if desired
  • Pickles
  • condiments of your choice
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Instructions

  1. Using a sharp knife, remove any "silver skin" and any tough, gristly parts from the chuck, the brisket, and the short ribs. Reserve the skin and gristle for making beef stock or toss them in the trash.
  2. Then slice off any large chunks of visible fat from the different cuts of meat. But don't get too obsessive—some fat ought to remain on the meat. Reserve the trimmed fat.
  3. Cut the chuck, brisket, and short ribs into 1-inch chunks, keeping the cuts of meat separate. Weigh the meat, still keeping the kinds separate. You should end up with a total of about 7 pounds.
  4. Place the meat on a wire rack set over a rimmed baking sheet, still keeping the three kinds separate. Salt the meat, using a ratio of 1/4 cup of salt for 7 pounds of meat. (If you have more than 7 pounds of meat, use a little more salt; if you have less than 7 pounds, use a little less salt.)
  5. Refrigerate the meat, uncovered, for 2 days. Cover and refrigerate the reserved fat.
  6. When you're ready to grind the meat, cut 1 1/2 pounds of the reserved fat into 1/2-inch chunks. (If you have more than 7 pounds of meat, use a little more fat; if you have less than 7 pounds of meat, use a little less fat.)
  7. Set up your meat grinder, whether it's the old-fashioned sort that clamps onto your counter or an attachment for your food processor or stand mixer.
  8. Grind the 1 1/2 pounds of cubed fat with the brisket and the short ribs and let it fall into a large bowl. Set the bowl off to the side.
  9. Now fashion a wide landing strip of sorts from plastic wrap on your work surface beneath your grinder, using multiple overlapping layers of plastic wrap.
  10. Pass the mixture of ground brisket and short ribs and fat through the grinder again, this time adding the chuck. As the ground meat emerges from the grinder, carefully let the columns of ground meat fall alongside one another on the plastic wrap in a parallel formation.
  11. Stack the meat columns to create a single large column of ground meat that's about 5 inches in diameter. Gently wrap the ground meat in plastic wrap, pressing firmly enough so the column holds together but not so firmly that you compress it too much.
  12. Refrigerate the ground meat for at least an hour and up to a couple of days. (Or you can freeze the meat for up to 3 months.)
  13. When you're ready to cook the burgers, unwrap the ground meat and, using a sharp knife, slice it into as many burger patties as you like, each 3/4 to 1 inch thick.
  14. Melt some of the reserved fat on a griddle or in a large, preferably cast-iron skillet over medium-high heat. At the same time, heat another large but dry griddle or skillet over medium heat. Sear each patty, without budging it, until a crust forms, 60 to 90 seconds.
  15. Using a thin metal spatula, flip the patties and carefully sear the other side for 45 to 60 seconds. Move the patties to the ungreased skillet over medium heat to finish cooking to the desired doneness and to allow some of the grease to drain. The exact amount of time will depend on how you like your burger.
  16. Move the burgers to a warm place for another 2 minutes to rest and drain, such as a wire cooling rack set on a rimmed baking sheet in a low oven.☞ TESTER TIP: Never grill these burgers. The fat and moisture will drip right out. Searing the burgers in a generous amount of fat creates that all-important moisture-sealing crust that ensures rich, juicy, flavorful burgers.
  17. Assemble your burger however you darn well please with pickles and any condiments.

Nutrition Information

Show Details
Serving 1burger, no condiments Calories 610kcal (31%) Carbohydrates 22g (7%) Protein 61g (122%) Fat 30g (46%) Saturated Fat 12g (60%) Trans Fat 1g Cholesterol 186mg (62%) Sodium 1487mg (62%) Fiber 1g (4%) Sugar 3g (6%)

Nutrition Facts

Serving: 16burgers

Amount Per Serving

Calories 610 kcal

% Daily Value*

Serving 1burger, no condiments
Calories 610kcal 31%
Carbohydrates 22g 7%
Protein 61g 122%
Fat 30g 46%
Saturated Fat 12g 60%
Trans Fat 1g 50%
Cholesterol 186mg 62%
Sodium 1487mg 62%
Fiber 1g 4%
Sugar 3g 6%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.

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Overall Rating

5.0

15 reviews
Excellent

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