Little did I know a comment on another thread yesterday would spawn this full-blown one today...
I am a bit of a hamburger "snob" - I've bought and tried most of those brand name ones in stores
and found them all lacking - and I sure as hell will not buy any meat from WallyWorld (I've been in
their processing/distribution facilities - nope, nope, nope).
Being an enthusiastic amateur cook these days, I've learned a few things along the way by simply
following a few basics:
1. Find the best meat in the area (talking store stuff here usually) and stick with it.
In our area, it's none of the big chain stores, but a little IGA about 20 miles away has them all beat
(their suppliers are Kentucky grass-fed types of ranchers).
Got to be fresh beef, at least when bought...
2. If you're making burgers, FAT MATTERS. A Lot. The stores will sometimes do a "loss leader" $2.99/lb
hamburger sale (gotta buy it at 3lbs or more big packs) that make fantastic burgers.
Leaner beef is great in sauces and tacos and such, but for burgers, the meat flavor is the thing first.
3. I've all but permanently shut down the gas grill, never use the thing anymore...
I've about worn out a flat griddle instead. You work one of those properly, amazing things happen.
4. Everybody knows how to mimic their parents and scorch up a regular burger, throw some salt and
pepper on the thing, what have you.
My burger learning journey really began when, disgusted with what all the big chain burger joints had
become in this part of the country, I started wanting to know how to replicate what they used to be
before they went all to hell, so I sought out recipes, watched old training videos, all of that.
This of course expanded to doing the same with burger chains I'd never experienced in this part of
the country - the Smashburger, the Whataburger, the In n Out, the Steak and Ale burger - and has
taken me all over the map researching and replicating old recipes.
Amazing, all the ways you can do this - and as a result, the old el cheapo burger dinner never gets
old - and it's a poor mans' way of experimenting and exploring dinners without breaking the bank.