How to make salt in burger permeate throughout the entire meat?
I have been eating beef burgers from various different shops however having asked them they ALL use the exact same brand and product. Here in east london uk they also all use a standard flat top grill(basically a rectangle pan). I have noticed that when I eat at one shop in particular it always comes out very salty wheares it isn't like this for other shops. I even bought some raw burgers from the salty shop and cooked them at home and it didn't taste salty. They recently closed for a few days and having now reopened there burgers no longer taste salty but just like all the other shops selling the same burger. My gues is that they reset or changed something which was allowing the burger to be salty once cooked. It cooked be that there is an optimal grill temperature to make the salt permeate. it could be that there fridge temperature was low and this allows the burgers to brine. It could have been something else.
Do you know why, what makes the burger taste so salty. It cannot be a bacth issue as the shop has produced the same results for several months until they closed. Also they all sell the same burgers and the burgers have 2grams. Do you know what factor might cause the salt to permeate into the meats tissues so well which shows in the final burger?
Is there anything I can do to get this result when cooking beef burgers at home?
Thanks
Best Answer
This 'trick' is used by many a fine chef. Meat is salted, wrapped and refrigerated hours or even overnight, prior to cooking. Yes, salt will draw moisture from the meat initially, but over time that moisture will migrate back into the meat taking the salt with it! The salt also breaks down the protein structure in the muscle rendering a more tender steak. The steak is rinsed and dried (a wet steak will steam not char), seasoned, and fired. Ground beef can be handled in the same fashion. Using a medium or coarse salt and erring on the less salty side, you can find the right proportion to suit your taste. Season before forming or after. Some contend that the seasoning is made bitter by the heat and flame of the grill. Go figure.
Other tips: The meat should be mixed and formed with a gentle hand — use only as much pressure as it takes to hold the patties together. For almost foolproof rare or medium-rare meat, go right from fridge to grill.
Pictures about "How to make salt in burger permeate throughout the entire meat?"
How do you get salt out of burgers?
If you have added too much salt to your ground beef, you can easily rinse it off. Just put the ground beef in a colander, run water over it, and let the water completely drain, and pat dry with a paper towel. Water is a great way to remove excess salt from cooked ground beef.What can you do if you put too much salt in meat?
To fix over-salted meats, just give them a quick rinse under running water, and pat them dry with a paper towel when you're done. You can also leach the salt out of salt pork or bacon that you find too salty by soaking it in water for at least two hours before you serve it.Do you salt both sides of a burger?
That said, don't skimp on the salt and pepper. Season one side of the patty with salt and pepper right before you place it on the grill, seasoned side down. Before you flip the burger, season the other side. Think gentle when forming your burgers; now is definitely not the time to be heavy-handed.Should you salt the inside of a burger?
Salt removes water from and dissolves some of the meat proteins, causing them to bind the insoluble proteins together\u2014something good for the springy bite to sausages, not for a tender burger. So wait to salt your burgers until just before they hit the pan or grill.Can Gordon Ramsay Cook a Burger in 10 Minutes for a Front-Line Workers Charity? | Ramsay In 10
More answers regarding how to make salt in burger permeate throughout the entire meat?
Answer 2
I would say with almost 100% certainty that the 'salty' taste you're referring to (and the reason you can't replicate it at home) is coming from the 'seasoned' grill top they're using to cook the burgers on.
Given that you've stated that that particular 'shop' was recently refurbished and now the burgers don't have the same taste would confirm that. They probably either cleaned or replaced the grill top they use to cook them on.
For more information on how this 'seasoned griddle' can impart flavour into what's cooked on it, do some google searches on 'seasoned grills, griddles and cast iron pans'.
Answer 3
I sincerely doubt that anything fancy was going on here. It sounds like there was some salt left behind on the cooking surface (e.g. from cooking other things and seasoning them with salt). This is of course assuming that you're right that the burgers didn't simply contain more salt to begin with.
If you want salty burgers at home just sprinkle it on before cooking, and if that's not enough, add a bit at a time while they cook. You can also mix some into the patties if you make them yourself, though in the quantities you want that may affect the texture (see the comments). (Also, if you were looking at nutrition facts and seeing 2g of sodium, that's a huge amount for one burger - that's about the maximum recommended amount for an entire day.)
As for your emphasis on the salt permeating the meat, I don't think you have much to worry about. If you're happy with something that was apparently done without mixing anything in, you'll be fine with whatever you do; I think you're mostly just picking up on quantity of salt.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: chicken mackay, Jonathan Borba, Robin Stickel, Gonzalo Guzman