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Grilled then Baked Burgers?

DaveM
Posts: 100
I had a burger the other day at a restaurant in WV that grills, then bakes, their burgers. They offer a 10oz burger and it takes 30 minutes from ordering to delivery for medium rare. The burger was absolutely incredible! Unfortunately, I live 2 hours from there, but am already craving the next one. Will need to recreate the experience at home.
Has anyone tried something similar at home? I'm curious as to the temperature & time for the grilling portion and baking time.
Happy Friday!
Dave
Has anyone tried something similar at home? I'm curious as to the temperature & time for the grilling portion and baking time.
Happy Friday!
Dave
--Dave from Leesburg, VA
BGE XL, Viking 42", Firepit with $16 grill
Comments
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I usually bake burgers first (rasied indirect 300F) then take out the platesetter and turn up the heat to reverse sear.
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Sounds like a forward sear
i like reverse sear better for egging.“There are three rules that I live by: never get less than twelve hours sleep; never play cards with a guy who has the same first name as a city; and never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body.”
Coach Finstock Teen Wolf -
A medium rare burger? You're a braver man than me!1 large BGE, Spartanburg SC
My dog thinks I'm a grilling god. -
Grillin_beers said:A medium rare burger? You're a braver man than me!
As for the 10 oz!!! burger... That's not a burger, it's a meatloaf! Why don't you call the place and ask for details. Who knows, they might tell you times and temps.I hate it when I go to the kitchen for food and all I find are ingredients!
MichaelCentral Connecticut -
Eoin said:I usually bake burgers first (rasied indirect 300F) then take out the platesetter and turn up the heat to reverse sear.
XLBGE, LBGE, Charbroil Gas Grill, Weber Q2000, Old Weber Kettle, Rectec RT-B380, Yeti 65, Yeti Hopper 20, RTIC 20, RTIC 20 Soft Side - Too many drinkware vessels to mention.
Not quite in Austin, TX City Limits
Just Vote- What if you could choose "none of the above" on an election ballot? Millions of Americans do just that, in effect, by not voting. The result in 2016: "Nobody" won more counties, more states, and more electoral votes than either candidate for president. -
Sounds wonderful!
I make 8oz burgers (weight before cook) and sort of do what you are describing. I cook them direct at about 450F for about 1.5 minutes on each side (long enough to get a good sear/grill marks), add toppings like bacon and cheese, and then I shut the BGE down completely and let the burgers dwell (bake?) for about 6-8 minutes ... all depends on how you/your guests prefer the internal temp.
We buy ground chuck from a local meat market who grinds their meat in-house and I trust the quality of their meat, so I usually cook my burgers med rare/medium.
Obviously my method doesn't take 30 min, but I am sure you could make it take that long if you cooked them Trex Style. Let us know what you try!
I'm Kristi ~ Live in FL ~ BGE since 2003.
I write about food & travel on Necessary Indulgences. You can also find me on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. -
I'm getting hungry looking at the pictures. I buy a half cow every year from a buddy, so I've got lots of chuck to work with. Just pulled 2 pounds out of the freezer for dinner tonight. Burgers, anyone?
--Dave from Leesburg, VA BGE XL, Viking 42", Firepit with $16 grill -
I always do that for my burgers (although never 10 oz). Get CI or CS screaming hot, add in a couple spoonfuls of ghee, and put in patties. Sear for 3-4 minutes on the first side and then flip. Once you flip, stick in a 300 degree oven and cook until desired level of doneness.
I usually use the gas grill, side burner for the sear, and then into the main part of the grill to finish on the indirect side.LBGE
Pikesville, MD
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Interesting method, hot sear for crust then a slow, low Dry heat to finish. If it takes thirty minutes for medium rare and it is baked/roasted after the sear, the oven temps must be almost sous vide like, that is not much over the finish temp - for medium rare in the 135-140ºF range.
MCAH has a sous vide followed by a deep fried burger that I tried once. Made a good burger was not worth the effort IMO.Delta B.C. - Whiskey and steak, because no good story ever started with someone having a salad! -
DaveM said:I had a burger the other day at a restaurant in WV that grills, then bakes, their burgers. They offer a 10oz burger and it takes 30 minutes from ordering to delivery for medium rare. The burger was absolutely incredible! Unfortunately, I live 2 hours from there, but am already craving the next one. Will need to recreate the experience at home.
Has anyone tried something similar at home? I'm curious as to the temperature & time for the grilling portion and baking time.
Happy Friday!
Dave
4 minutes per side (turning every 2 mins for sear marks) results in a med rare burger.
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If you're a burger connoisseur, the medium rare ballpark is where you want to be. Don't always, but I try to grind my own meat (that came out wrong). Thanks for the thread - reminds me I'd like to try SV burgers. 130F for 4 or so hours. Then a quick nuclear sear.
______________________________________________I love lamp.. -
im good with a 425 dome temp cook to med/rare. the longer cook at lower temps gives me an off smoke flavor i dont like. im a one flipper and off the grill
fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
Carolina Q said:Well, if you like 'em that way, just sous vide or water bath long enough to kill stuff and then sear. This says 40 minutes-2 1/2 hours at 124-129°. http://www.seriouseats.com/2015/08/the-food-lab-complete-guide-to-sous-vide-burger.html#chart
As for the 10 oz!!! burger... That's not a burger, it's a meatloaf! Why don't you call the place and ask for details. Who knows, they might tell you times and temps.
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