Pointedstick wrote:I'm sure it would be even better with grass-fed ground beef and homemade buns but you don't even need to do all that to have a delicious, inexpensive burger that beats the fast food stuff every time.
True. But, if you want to make a fantastic burger — better than anything you've ever had at a fast food chain — you need to grind your own beef. If you don't have a grinder, no worries, here's what you do...
Get two parts beef chuck (80% is fine), 1 part beef brisket and 1 part short rib and cut them into 1-inch cubes. Really you can mix and match a bunch of different blends (2 parts sirloin steak tips to 1 part short ribs works well too). Anyway, cut them into the 1-inch cubes and place them on a cookie sheet, spaced apart, and place the cookie sheet into the freezer for 15-20 minutes. When they come out, they should be hard but ever-so-slightly pliable. Before the pieces warm up, throw them into a food processor and do about 10 to 15 one-second pulses. When you are done, you should have small pebbly beef pieces. Dump out those pieces into little mounds and GENTLY shape the ground beef into loosely packed patties. The less you touch them the better since packing the patty will only toughen the collagen proteins as they shrink and tighten when exposed to heat. Season with salt and pepper and sear on a hot griddle. You've never had hamburgers that good.
If you use grass-fed beef, you should lower the temperature a bit and cook them a little more gently.
There's nothing like fresh-ground beef burgers. Nothing comes close. The biggest problem with getting ground beef from the supermarket is that you are just eating the "trimmings" which is the in-between parts between the various cuts of meat — the least flavorful parts of the cow. Actually, supermarket ground beef is often old dairy cows that are the least desirable.
I believe I saw somewhere that scientists have found over 1,000 different strands of DNA in a single pound of supermarket ground beef. That's not surprising since the beef is processed in enormous warehouses where thousands of cows are being processed. So, taking three cuts of beef and grinding them (or getting your butcher to grind them) will provide much tastier burgers.
And grinding bacon into the beef doesn't hurt either

Nothing I say should be construed as advice or expertise. I am only sharing opinions which may or may not be applicable in any given case.