Sunday, 20 December 2009
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A Hamburger Rating System
I love good hamburgers. Just typing those words makes my mouth water. I close my eyes and I can imagine the perfect burger: a homemade freshly toasted bun with a juicy half pound of grilled meat, gooey cheese, fresh lettuce, perfectly sliced tomatoes, a few onion rings, some pickle crinkles, and a dollop of catsup, mustard, and mayonnaise. Mhmm. The only everyday meal I like more than a burger, is a burger and a milkshake.
Texas Monthly recently published a list of the 50 Best Burgers in Texas. To date, I have sampled about ten, but nothing has really blown me away. The ranking system may be accurate, but the comparisons are not. Part of the problem is that in order to make a list of the 50 best burgers, one must sample hundreds of burgers and the only healthy way to do that is to split the workload up between several people. Each person is going to inherently taste things a little differently. To complicate matters, the list ranks specialty burgers; instead of just listing burgers, the list includes korean bbq burgers, buffalo burgers, and even ostrich burgers.
I want a list of the best HAMBURGERS (and yes, hamburgers are supposed to have cheese on them). So I have decided to create a mostly objective way of comparing hamburgers and only hamburgers.
In order for a hamburger to appear on my list, it must be beef, it must have a hamburger bun, and it must have lettuce, tomatoes, pickles, onions, and sliced cheese (not crumbly cheese, e.g. bleu cheese). It can have mustard, catsup, or mayonnaise. It may not have anything else, including buffalo sauce, ranch, thousand island, fried onion rings, steaksauce, etc. Remember, I am comparing hamburgers, not specialty burgers.
Below is my prototype for a grading sheet:
Burger (6 points)- This is the most important part of the burger. As they say, if you don't like your meat, what are you living for... (?) The grading system is pretty simple: answer the question yes or no; one point for yes (in some cases two points for YES), none for no.
- Is your meat prepared the way you wanted it? (If you ask for your burger medium, it should be medium. 'nuff said.)
- Is your meat aesthetically pleasing? (It should look like it was prepared with care, not lumpy and gross)
- Is the texture of the meat good? (If it's good, it won't be gummy or crunchy or have junk in it.)
- Do you like the flavor? (A burger is not just browned meat; it should be seasoned and it should have flavor of its own.)
- 1-2 points: Was the burger above average? (It is, or it isn't. Do you think this burger makes the cut?)
Bun (3 points)
- Is the bun fresh? (Is it fluffy and light? If it's stale or old, the bun can ruin the burger)
- Is the bun well prepared? (Has it been buttered and toasted or grilled? Slapping bread on grilled meat doesn't make a burger)
- Does the bun taste good? (Would you hesitate to put it back into your mouth?)
Cheese (3 points)
- Is it free? (God made burgers as a pedestal for cheese, you shouldn't have to pay extra for cheese.)
- Can you taste it? (No point in slapping cheese on your meat if you can't taste it.)
- Is it good? (It better not be any of that Kraft singles BS.)
Toppings (8 points)
- 1-2 points: Are the toppings clean and aesthetically pleasing? (Please no shredded or brown wilted crap)
- 1-2 points: Are the toppings fresh? (Is the tomato red? Is the lettuce green? Are the onions crunchy?)
- 1-2 points: Do the lettuce, onions, and tomatoes, taste good? (Would you use the words juicy and flavorful to describe them?)
- Are there enough toppings? (No one wants just one tomato or a teaspoon of chopped onions.)
- Are the mustard, catsup, or mayonnaise a good kind of special? (Are they made on site? Do they test better than the average?)
Synergy (10 points)
That being said, what's the best hamburger you've eaten? How does it score?- On a scale of 1-10, how good does the combined burger taste?
- This is the most important part of the burger. As they say, if you don't like your meat, what are you living for... (?) The grading system is pretty simple: answer the question yes or no; one point for yes (in some cases two points for YES), none for no.
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Comments (29)
The best burger I've ever eaten was a Five Guys bacon cheeseburger. I would have to deduct points from the bread though because it always (unfortunately) falls apart, but I think the fact that it felt like I was having a heart attack while eating it more than makes up for it. XD
In'N'Out... no contest.
@salvatruca_stalking_havok13@xanga - Good to know. I've been wanting to try that place! Now I know what to order when I get there!
...lol then all the hamburgers i've eaten were pretty bad >__<
i really want to eat a burger now :]
I like you. This is awesome.
Unfortunately, most of the burger joints I've been to in my live have been fail. They have been fail because the employees do not take pride in their burger. The owner/ creator may have, but they haven't been able to pass along the passion of burger perfection to their employees. Probably because they're underpaid and thankless. This is wrong.
IMO, there are decent burgers and there are great burgers. Decent burgers are standard fare. Great burgers though, are rare things.
They start with the right kind of meat. No gristle. Dry Aged. Good beefy cut of (at least) Prime Beef or Wagyu. About 85% beef. I like making mine out of a spliced-out Chuck Eye, Ribeye, and Tenderloin, all ground up together for interesting contrast in textures and flavor -- by hand, so I can control the texture. They're seasoned with a bit of Sea Salt and Peppercorn, nothing fancy; and then seared in a cast-iron pan superheated to about 800F, and then let to coast down to a perfect 130F inside.
Fresh-baked Brioche bun, with a home-made mayonnaise coating the bottom bun.
Everything else is extraneous. It's the zen-ness of the perfect burger that counts.
With that said, I do like mine with a melted slice of Irish Dubliner and some thick-cut home-smoked Kiawe Bacon (which I also make), with a few dabs of aged Balsamic Vinegar and some crisp Arugula tucked under the top bun.
Californians will say In'N'Out undoubtedly, but I think the burger that edges that out slightly is the Apple Pan burger on the westside. It's been there forever. The menu is simple. You go there, you get the burger and the fries...and room permitting, a slice of pie.
for me a good burger is in the patty and in the bun. i prefer medium-well, the ones that are pink in the center. i also hate the ones that are greasy. it should have lots of flavor to it. freshly cook buns that are from the bakery are also a plus. fluffy buns are good. i can eat a burger without toppings, just as long as it has cheese and ketchup, ill be happy to call it my burger.
I'm not there to rate, I'm there to eat.
I just had In-N-Out tonight. Haha.
The perfect burger is all about synergy ... and I believe that the only way to properly cook a burger is over a grill burning hardwood charcoal. I believe a smaller burger is more appropriate for actually enjoying the entire thing. 8oz burgers are cumbersome.
Anyhow, this is just personal preference. The best burger in recent memory was from Black Iron Burger in Alphabet City, NYC. Horseradish cheddar is the bomb. Hardwood charcoal grill is killer. It's a certain recipe for success.
Five Guys, no doubt.
I can only have one of those every once-in-a-while because I feel like I'm committing all seven sins at once when I eat one of their hamburgers.
The best burger I ever had was at a small Mom and Pop shop but I can't remember the name of the place for the life of me =/ I was like 6 or 7 years old.
I like my Mimi's Cafe burgers.
yum yum! I want one after reading this!
haha this is funny. i don't really eat burgers, but i love mc chicken burger. though it doesn't have any cheese (if only additional cheese is free of charge), i would rate it 9. =D i never get sick of it!! i also like ramly burgers. yummyyyyyy
Definitely want a burger now.
I kind of feel like if you're rating burgers, though, you're doing it wrong. Spend more time enjoying and less time thinking about it, IMO.
The McD's Big'n'Tasty Bacon is my all time fav EVER since I first tasted it!
Love the way you made this check list btw
nomnononom. makes me wanna have a burger. All the burgers I have eaten were moderately "okay".
Oh God. In-N-Out. Even Bakers burgers are pretty good. Or this place that used to be in Seal Beach that closed down.
I think Carl's Jr has the best burger. :\
@salvatruca_stalking_havok13@xanga -@BroadwayBound93@xanga - Definitely agree, Five Guys is the best I've ever had!
I've heard In'N'Out is really the best though, my guy friend went to California a few times and he talks about it ALL the time. I don't really do fast food much, I prefer to make my own burgers and try to be more healthy about it :P
Meersburger from Meers, Oklahoma. It takes up an entire pie plate and it's made out of longhorn beef. None of these pathetic fast food burgers can compare to its glory.
@democrab@xanga -
I'm gonna have to go there, living in Oklahoma in all.
I've never really had a decent burger, I guess, none that stick out in my mind.
As long as it has mushrooms and swiss I'm not complaining. x)
@imperfect_still@xanga - Yep. I keep hearing this, but we don't have any nearby, so I guess I'll just have to wait and see. Ahaha. Same here. My mom is always making burgers with the George Foreman grill. Yeaaahhhh!
so, then, according to your rating system, a crunchwrap does NOT qualify as a burger?
just to clarify.