Few things
are as universally loved as a burger.
However you
have yours – spicy, simple, with every topping in the world or naked – is down
to personal preference. But what if you wanted to amp up your burger just a
bit, and get your recipe closer to sheer perfection?
After years
of testing in the kitchen, these chefs have now nailed their burger recipe –
and are willing to share their secrets…
Sabrina
Ghayour
Sabrina
Ghayour advocates simplicity with burgers.
“As a
Persian, I used to make a burger patty like a kofta – onions, spices, whatever
mixed in it, and that was always delicious,” she remembers. “Then when I moved
to Yorkshire, it was lockdown, but thankfully, I had a lovely butcher that
would deliver and fill my chest freezer with stuff, because I live in the middle
of nowhere.
“I was
like, ‘I’m just going to keep it simple – I don’t have half of those things
[ingredients she would normally use]’. So I get 200 grams of meat, mash the
patty flat, season with salt and pepper, and char in a super hot, dry pan. Flip
it over, season again.
“Put that
in a burger with onions, tomatoes, pickled slices, personally I don’t like
cheese, but bacon, then a squirt of ketchup, tiny bit of mayo… That, to me, is
the perfect burger – and even those little fart cakes that are my stepsons love
that.
“For me,
it’s keeping things simple, and having super good meat.”
Persiana Everyday by Sabrina Ghayour
Ixta
Belfrage
Ixta
Belfrage admits the secret to a perfect burger is down to personal taste. “For
me, it has to have some kind of fruity, chilli aspect to it,” she says.
“That’s
obviously not a classic one, but I love meat with – not like a sweet chilli,
but a fruity chilli. Like a mango habanero kind of thing would be really nice,
or Calabrian chilli and pineapple relish. I love fruit, chilli and meat
together in a burger.”
Mezcla:
Recipes To Excite by Ixta Belfrage
Edd
Kimber
Like
Ghayour, Edd Kimber reckons “the best burger is the simplest burger. I don’t
like endless amounts of toppings, I don’t like random cheese-stuffed burgers or
anything”.
He also
suggests the magic comes from “very good quality meat”, and then it’s down to
how you cook it. Kimber favours a “smash burger style”, saying: “The reason for
that is you can really amp up the flavour, and you’re not adding so many
different things. It’s just relying on cooking the meat, giving it as much
roasted caramelised flavour as possible.
“So, you
make the meat into a ball, then you very, very firmly press it into a very hot
pan. As you push it down, it smashes into a thin patty, and by putting pressure
on it you create a really caramelised crust. It also cooks very quickly, so
it’s great if you’re in a rush.”
Small Batch
Bakes by Edd Kimber
Richard
Jones and Sophie Ellis-Bextor
The Feeling
bassist – and now cookbook writer with wife Sophie Ellis-Bextor – Richard Jones
says: “I use a brioche bun and I like cooking [the burger] on the barbecue. I
do thin patties pilled up with cheese in between – that’s quite trendy now,
rather than a gourmet burger, which are big thick ones [served] red in the
middle. So yeah two or three thin patties, then gherkins are a must, I like red
onion, jalapenos and chipotle sauce.”
Ellis-Bextor
adds: “No salad for me! I don’t want lettuce and tomato in there! I know that
might be controversial.”
Love. Food.
Family: Recipes From The Kitchen Disco by Sophie Ellis Bextor and Richard Jones
Suzie
Lee
For Suzie
Lee, it’s all about the meat you use for the best burger. She recommends a mix
of beef and pork mince, saying: “You’ve got the beef flavour, but the pork gives
it a softer texture, and a different blend of flavour.”
You can
even use sausage meat for the pork component, and Lee adds: “You don’t need
breadcrumbs, I can’t describe it until people try it.
“The
Americans do it quite a lot – that’s why it’s called a hamburger, because it’s
a blend of pork. Try it – that blend helps with the flavour, and balances it
really well.”
Simply
Chinese by Suzie Lee