The main issue with making a good burger at home is the bun. You can't find good buns in the stores. They're all garbage bread. Plus unless you're making 6 burgers for yourself the package of buns is going to go bad. I don't understand why they don't sell buns in frozen form, then you could heat them up in your oven or toaster when it's time for a burger. One of the best parts of the In-N-Out burgers is the bun, toasted around the edges just perfectly...mmmmm.
But I don't use buns anyways when having burgers at home, and home made burgers are great depending on the chef (you)
I like their fries a lot, but I think their burgers are overrated.
Dave
Most people who claim their home made [whatever] is better than a restruant is full of shit. Was at a friends and his neighbor was BBQ'ing, as he put it "the tastiest burgers ever" I ate one, pretty boring, not bad at all, but nothing to brag about. In N Out makes nothing but burgers and honestly I can't think of a single way they could improve them.
Dudes who go ape shit on how superior their home burgers are remind me of the "my babies the cutest baby in the woooooorld!" It's generally only true to them.
*will go to In N Out at 10:30 when they open today.
You really might want to get up from your computer for a few seconds. That will allow you to pull your head out of your ass long enough to read the idiocy that spews forth from your pie-hole. And even better, it might allow someone with a brain a chance to explain your epic fail.
1) Five guys admits they will serve their burgers no other way except well-done.
2) Every person that knows anything at all about burgers understands that you can't do a burger well-done and still have it be juicy unless it is the shittiest, fattiest beef on earth. Cook good beef well done and all you get is a hockey puck.
Please point out the myth except the one where you've somehow managed to convince yourself that you have anything relevant to add to this thread. You don't.
I was terribly disappointed in five guys. We have two here in town now, and I have only been the one disappointing time.
The main issue with making a good burger at home is the bun. You can't find good buns in the stores. They're all garbage bread. Plus unless you're making 6 burgers for yourself the package of buns is going to go bad. I don't understand why they don't sell buns in frozen form, then you could heat them up in your oven or toaster when it's time for a burger. One of the best parts of the In-N-Out burgers is the bun, toasted around the edges just perfectly...mmmmm.
But I don't use buns anyways when having burgers at home, and home made burgers are great depending on the chef (you)
I'm not saying mine are better but in 30 years of cooking 'em I think I've found a good method, I use my Lodge cast-iron griddle and get it pretty hot by heating it with my turkey fryer burner then use a small or medium sized patty and get a Shake and steak style burger (crispy edges) fairly easily. As for the buns Martini's potato sandwich rolls are good.
Yep. Everyone talks about grilling burgers. If I want a real, diner style burger it's got to be pan fried(or a griddle if you want). I'll fry up a pile of bacon beforehand and fry up the burgers in the remaining grease. Your house smells like the ass end of a Steak 'n Shake but the result is awesome.
oh yeah thats good too. but i think a well grilled one is far better. I haven't mastered pan frying or griddle.
Grilled burgers just don't get that same crispy edged, nice grease laden, sloppy fall apart in your mouth texture to them that pan frying them does.
Get a cast iron skillet, heat it up, add some oil and plop in a patty. Let it cook for about 2 minutes a side and toss the pan, burger and all, it in the oven for a couple minutes at 250 degrees to cook the rest of the way.
Have some buns buttered up and toasted while you are cooking and then add whatever fixin's you want. That's good eats.
I'm a fan of greasy spoon burgers though...
BTW: do they have a name for a burger with mustard instead of that awful thousand island dressing they use?
You're doing it again. Show me something official that says they use sub-par beef. Most places use 70/30 or 80/20 beef, which is what you want for a burger. If you start getting into super lean ground sirloin, that's where you start getting dryness and you have to serve it rare.
You're also confusing well done and burned. You can cook beef well done without it being dry. The key to doing it is using a thin patty. If it's too thick the outside will evaporate away all the moisture before the inside gets done.
Five Guys sucks anyway, so you didn't miss much.
I have a new favorite burger place, which I actually like better than In-N-Out.
Larkburger.
Alright, I checked out their site and it looks freakin' delicious. Email me one, would you?
http://www.larkburger.com/
