Guacabaconut Burger
- 12 lb ground sirloin
- 12 lb ground chuck
- 12 lb ground lamb
- 4 teaspoons salt
- 12 tablespoon peppercorn blend, ground
- 1 Hass avocado
- 1 tablespoon white onion, minced
- 1 tablespoon garlic, minced
- 1 tablespoon jalapeno, chopped
- 1 tablespoon light olive oil
- 6 slices hickory smoked bacon, thick cut
- 4 tablespoons peanut butter
- 4 kaiser rolls
- Place meats in a medium stainless or glass bowl, breaking it up as you drop it in so that it makes a big, loose mound.
- Add 3/4 of the salt and the ground pepper and mix lightly by hand until blended.
- Try to avoid mashing the meat too densely - the benefits of a loose patty will become clear later.
- Divide into 4 parts.
- If you have 6" round molds, press the meat into the molds.
- If not, form the meat into patties, pressing together just enough to hold it together.
- The patties should work out to be about 1/2" thick.
- Set aside to rest.
- Peel and pit the avocado - if you cannot find a Haas avocado, a Florida will work but will not have the same taste due to the lower fat content.
- Chop into chunks and place in a small food processor.
- Add the garlic, onion, jalapeno, olive oil and the remaining salt.
- Blend to a not-quite-smooth puree.
- Scoop into an appropriately-sized blowl, cover tightly and refrigerate.
- Fry bacon and drain well.
- If you have a broiler pan, oven frying is less fatty and more consistent, if you place cold raw bacon on a cold broiler pan, placing in a cold oven on the middle rack and then turning the broiler.
- This works by slowly increasing the temperature, rendering out most of the fat before the bacon reaches crisping temps (we can thank Alton Brown for that little secret).
- Watch the bacon carefully!
- It can go from rubbery to black in as little as 15 seconds!
- Cook the burger patties on a flattop, electric skillet or cast iron skillet at 375F or medium high.
- I don't recommend grilling these, as the loose patties can - and probably will - break up on a grate and end up as charcoal - really tasty charcoal, but not so good for this recipe.
- Cook 4-5 minutes on each side until browned and carmelized, turning only once.
- While the burgers cook, slice and toast rolls in a toaster oven - or in the remaning heat of the broiler after you've cooked the bacon.
- Spread the bottom of each with a tablespoon of the peanut butter while the rolls are still warm.
- There's no reason for this, the warm rolls just make the pb all melty and that's pretty cool - something the kids can do to distract them from what you're about to do to the top of the roll.
- Take the crowns, spread them with a liberal dose of the guac which you've just surreptitiously removed from the fridge, and stick 2 or 3 half-slices of bacon in the guac.
- Lay a patty on the pb bun and top with the bacon and guac crown.
- Serve with mac and cheese, kettle crisps or seasoned fries and cole slaw.
- Tips: - For yet another dimesion of flavor, lay a couple dill pickle slices on the bottom buns, on top of the pb.
- I like Claussen's sandwich stackers or hamburger slices as they're clean tasting and stay crisp under a hot patty.
- - Try a sourdough or pumpernickel roll.
- OK, maybe pumpernickel is going too far.
- Nah.
- - Try crunchy peanut butter instead of creamy.
- This tip is pretty much self-explanatory.
ground sirloin, ground chuck, ground lamb, salt, peppercorn blend, avocado, white onion, garlic, jalapeno, light olive oil, hickory smoked bacon, peanut butter, kaiser rolls
Taken from www.food.com/recipe/guacabaconut-burger-449327 (may not work)