Kolek planning to go pro
Love the Wisco Burger. I do agree that ordering the fries separately is annoying, but they are pretty good(Oscar's are better). Also Oscar's has a better beer selection.I have a friend that started a Burger of the Month club here in Milwaukee, where once a month he picks a supposedly good burger place and a date/time. We all meet up, have burgers, beer, and good conversation and then score the burger. Things like quality of add-ons, beer selection, and fries are judged as part of it. Couldn't recommend it highly enough.It's been really enlightening about what's good and not good about Milwaukee area burgers. One big take away has been made to order. The group that attends changes from month to month depending on availability but we've had anywhere from 4 to 12 people at places and a good spectrum of temperature preference. The majority like medium, some medium rare and some well done(I don't get that but whatever). The biggest knock every where we've been has been either a lack of consistency in cooking to order or not cooking it to order at all. One place we went, we were all given a choice of pink or no pink, all 6 people choice pink and not one of us had any pink in our burgers. Has anyone else seen this phenomenon? Is it a fear of litigation, poor grill management, or just inconsistency of what medium is? What brought this up was, at Jake's I've always had it cooked right, but the night we were there for our burger club half the table(12 people) got things cooked correctly the other half(all med-rare or med) had them overcooked.
How do 'all make the best burgers @ home?Bring the meat to close to room temp, use a seasoned cast iron skillet (also salt the pan too), get it blazing hot, about hockey puck sized patties around 1/3 of lb., 80/20...3-4 minutes a side, finished a few minutes in 250* oven.Toppings: the classic, good sliced american cheese, kosher pickles, yellow mustard, shredded lettuce, few red onions. Toasted bun, that is not too big, but large enough to hold everything together.
Totally agree with the method. I use a cast iron pan on the grill side burner. I like a petty closer to 1/2 pound, and just let them rest. no need for the oven. Use homemade pickles, leaf lettuce, a tomato slice...and the bun is critical. Nothing manufactured. Gotta be fresh from bakery. Lately been partial to Sheboygan style hard rolls. Perfect size and texture.On that note, bun is the biggest reason (among others) I am not particularly fond of jakes burgers. I think its rather average.
I love this idea. Might need to steal it.
Really, this whole thread and no one got this? LOL. Her response is fantastic.https://www.youtube.com/v/8m-piAJd67s
Y'all need to go protein style, i.e. sans bun.
Anybody else eat the heart attack that is Solly's? Stick of melted butter on it and all, along with a chocolate malt?
I ate at Solly's a couple of months ago for the first time in about 30 years. Not nearly as good as I remembered. There was so much melted butter on it that it fell apart when I tried to pick it up and left a lake of grease on my plate. They need a much lighter hand with that.
I’ve also come to a more definitive definition of my favorite type: simple. Many of the burgers on this list (we have seven holdovers we couldn’t possibly change, and 26 new entries)
Here is a list of the top 33 burgers in the country. I haven't been to any of them http://www.thrillist.com/eat/nation/the-33-best-burgers-in-the-country-holeman-and-finch-au-cheval-husk-and-more?utm_source=yahoo&utm_medium=syn&utm_term=web&utm_campaign=food
So far have had 3 (Both Chi and Solly's in MKE). Will have The Torch Bar while at the girlfriends families over xmas. Of the two Chicago, I will take Au Cheval. However, if you go there, try the fried bologna sandwich - it's tits!