Showing posts with label grilling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grilling. Show all posts

Friday, December 16, 2011

Foodie Friday! The Bethlehem Burger

From time to time my hubby plans to be a guest contributor on a Southern Girl's Guide.  Several weeks ago he introduced us to his Burgers Around the World concept which is something he has been working on for the past two years or so.  We have had some fantastic burgers over the years and I hope you tried his turkey burger that he shared before Thanksgiving because it was really yummy.  He's back this week for another installment of Foodie Friday and is sharing his latest creation, The Bethlehem Burger.  I would say his historical data is loose at best but it's a fun idea and it was truly melt in your mouth delicious.  I'll let him tell you more.

Guest Blogger:  A Southern Girl's Northern Guy

The challenge of the Bethlehem Burger was to create a burger with flavors that would transport you back to your childhood Christmas eve dinners but also capture cooking styles and methods that may have existed when the wise men were following the star to the manger. 

Although no one knows for sure where or when meatloaf was invented but it was mentioned in cookbooks as early as the 5th Century and it is conceivable that it was around BC because its goal was to make a tough piece of meat more palatable, feed more people and use up other things they had lying around.  To keep true to my hamburger roots though, this meatloaf is smoked on the grill, which was also a more common cooking method then grilling back then. 

This isn’t your mother’s meatloaf, but it taste and smells like something she probably used to make.  When I took my first bite, it immediately reminded me of my moms French Meat Pie, tourtiere.  Pronounced Tuut K, it was the thing I most looked forward to during the holidays.  It turns out the recipes don’t have a whole lot in common except for clove, but boy are they both good.  I think my wife will be sharing my mom’s special tourtiere recipe over the weekend as part of her favorite holiday dishes week.


Mix the following ingredients and form a loaf on a cookie sheet, then put the sheet on the smoker, or indirect heat until inside temp is at least 165, which takes about 2.5 hours You want the smoker around 250 and we used Pecan Wood.

1 slice bread
5 crushed crackers
2 teaspoons cloves
1 teaspoon ginger
1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1 chicken bullion cube
¼ cup water
1/2 small onion
1.5 lbs ground beef
1 egg

While your loaf is smoking you should mix up your sauce.  I never really measure ingredients when I make sauces, I  keep tasting it until it is just right, but here is what I can tell you.  Start with a lot of ketchup, and then add more brown sugar than you would think and finish it of with some nutmeg and a few squirts of jalapeno mustard

Top the loaf with the sauce for the last half hour of cooking, but save some of it to put on the finished burger.

Instead of a bun, use a flatbread, we tried one that was lightly toasted with olive oil and rosemary and topped the burger with feta cheese, you can use feta too unless you can find gvina bulgarit, a crumbled cheese from that area. 

Enjoy


Thursday, November 17, 2011

Foodie Friday! Thanksgiving on a Bun

My hubby is the king of the grill! At least around our house. And nothing would please me more than having him as my first guest contributor on A Southern Girl's Guide. He makes a mean burger and is a creative genius when it comes to mixing up such an American classic. We are especially fond of burgers in our house as my husband and sons do them together in a series of culinary delights that my husband has deemed Burgers Around the World. For more on that see the Burgers Around the World tab up above. Todays, he's sharing Thanksgiving on a Bun. It was so delicious and fun!

Take it away my love...

The Plymouth Rock Burger with Sweet Potato Aioli

When you think of Thanksgiving dinner, most people think of a roasted turkey, mashed potatoes, green bean casserole and a pumpkin pie for dessert. If you are a historian you think that the real first Thanksgiving more than likely had more lobsters and seafood than turkey and fixings. However, if you talk to people who were actually at the first Thanksgiving, you’ll learn they served Plymouth Rock Burgers. So if you need a creative way to use up you’re leftovers or you just have a Thanksgiving craving in June, the Plymouth Rock Burger will be sure to satisfy.

Sweet Potato Aioli
· ¼ brown sugar
· 1 cup water
· 1 egg yolk
· Juice of ½ a lemon
· 1 tbls minced garlic
· 1 cup olive oil
· 1 sweet potato
· Salt and pepper to taste

Peel and cube the sweet potato and steam until soft. Dissolve the sugar in the water over medium heat then set to cool. Combine the rest of the ingredients in a blender then mix in sugar water and sweet potatoes until smooth. The final consistency should be not too runny, but not too thick.

The Patty
· 1.3 lbs ground turkey
· 1 tbls mix of traditional Thanksgiving spices
- thyme, oregano, marjoram, basil, rosemary, sage
· ½ tbls of ground pepper
· 1 egg white
· 1 cup bread stuffing
· ½ finely diced onion
· Salt
· 1 tbls minced garlic

Mix all ingredients and store in the refrigerator for an hour. After an hour, fire up the grill on high heat, then make patties as big or small as you want. I always put a dimple on the top of the patty with by thumb so the burger isn't rounded after it cooks. Sear on high heat for 5 minutes a side and then turn the heat down to medium and cook until the inside temp is at least 165. Lightly toast the buns on the top rack to get grill marks on them.

The Rest
· Potato rolls
· Collard greens, I recommend a Southern Girl cooks those. perhaps she can share her secrets one day
· French fried onions
· Can of cranberry sauce

The Stack
bun - aioli - burger - collards - a couple thin slices of cranberry sauce - more aioli - fried onions - bun.........enjoy




Interesting Facts about Plymouth Rock

The rock has been broken in two with a combined weight of 10 tons

The longitude of Plymouth Rock = 70° 40'
The latitude of Plymouth Rock = 41° 57' 30"

It was thin pickings for traditional music of Plymouth Rock, but I think Adam Sandler's Thanksgiving Song is authentic