“Elevating comfort food always starts by identifying what it is about that dish that makes it so delicious that we come back to it time and time again,” says Silverton, chef/co-owner of the Osteria Mozza Restaurant Group, Los Angeles, who says a classic dish like a hamburger is always going to be nostalgic and personal. With “personal” as a key factor in connecting the dish to a memory, Silverton likes to serve a selection of condiments with her patties, these include: flavored mayonnaises, special mustards, her secret sauce, bacon, caramelized onions, and avocados. Another tip is cooking the burgers “animal style,” a phrase coined by the LA burger chain, In-N-Out, and referring to a mustard-crusted burger patty, which requires a cast iron or griddle. The charred mustard brings the flavor of the burger to “another level,” she says.
Serves 6
Ingredients
3 lbs/1.35kg coarsely ground beef
2 tbsp/30g kosher salt
2 tsp/8.4g fresh coarsely ground black pepper
¼ cup/56g Dijon mustard
12 thick-cut applewood-smoked bacon slices
6 soft hamburger buns (preferably sesame seed buns)
4 tbsp unsalted butter (½ stick)
2 tbsp/30g canola oil, or any other neutral-flavored oil
6 slices of Gruyere cheese
Condiments: caramelized onion, avocado halves, garlic mayonnaise, pickled mustard seed mayonnaise, Dijonnaise, olive anchovy mayonnaise, chipotle mayonnaise, spicy tarragon mustard and 6 large leaves of iceberg lettuce.
Method
- Form six 8-ounce (226g) patties from a blend of quality burger meat (my local butcher uses equal parts short rib, chuck, and brisket but whatever blend you use, aim for a 75-25 meat-to-fat ratio). Lay the patties on a baking sheet. Season each patty with ½ teaspoon of the salt, 1 teaspoon of pepper divided evenly over the 6 patties and spread 1 teaspoon of the Dijon mustard on each patty; repeat with the same measurements on the second side.
- Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 350°F/176°C. Lay the bacon on a baking sheet and bake until cooked all the way through but not crisp (about 15 to 17 minutes rotating the baking sheet from front to back halfway through). Remove the bacon from the oven and transfer it to a bed of paper towels to drain; cool to room temperature. Set aside.
- Melt one-third of the butter in a large sauté pan over medium heat. Add 2 buns to the sauté pan, cut side down, and cook until they are lightly toasted (about 2 minutes). Remove the buns from the pan. Add another third of the butter, let it melt in the pan, and toast 2 more buns; repeat once more for the final 2 buns.
- Pour enough canola oil into a large cast-iron skillet or griddle to barely cover the bottom and heat over high heat until it’s almost smoking, about 2 minutes. Lay 3 or 4 of the hamburger patties in the pan—make sure not to overcrowd the pan—and cook them until a crust forms on the bottom side (about 3 minutes for medium-rare burgers). Using a spatula, gently flip the burgers. Reduce the heat to medium and lay the cheese on the burgers. Put the lid on the pan to melt the cheese and cook the burgers for 3 to 4 minutes for medium-rare. For a well-done burger, cook it for 1 to 2 more minutes on each side. Remove the patties from the pan and cook the remaining patties in the same way, adding more oil to the pan if it gets dry and let it heat up each time before adding the meat to the pan.
- Assemble a burger patty, cheese side up, on each toasted bun. Rest the top bun on the burger but off to the side, inviting guests to dress up their burgers the way they wish with the selection of condiments served alongside.
Lobster mac and cheese by Justin Cogley