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Turkey burgers fall apart?
I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers.
They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to remain as one piece? Thanks |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
synergy3000 wrote: > I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers. > They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > remain as one piece? > > Thanks Don't add anything to them. I cook them all the time with no additions and they are ok. You have to brown them well on one side before you flip them, though. -L. |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
I have the same problem with crumbling turkey burgers. . .The secret is
to gobble them down really fast;-) Excuse the terrible play on words! Myrl Jeffcoat http://www.myrljeffcoat.com |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
On 2006-06-11, synergy3000 > wrote:
> They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > remain as one piece? One word: Sloppy Joes! nb |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
"notbob" > wrote in message
:: On 2006-06-11, synergy3000 > wrote: :: ::: They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to ::: remain as one piece? :: :: One word: Sloppy Joes! :: :: nb That was two words. ;-) BOB |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
On 2006-06-11, BOB > wrote:
> That was two words. Ok, I lied. nb |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
"synergy3000" > wrote in message
... >I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers. > They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > remain as one piece? You might try a small amount of mayonnaise. It will also keep them juicy, but it will probably affect the taste. |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
"synergy3000" > wrote in message
... > I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for > my turkey burgers. They are usually soft and fall > apart easily. Any tips for getting to remain as one > piece? Handle them a bit more before you form patties. In learning to make frikadeller (traditional Danish dish made with ground pork or a mixture of ground pork and veal, grated onion, flour, salt & pepper, egg and milk made into patties, balls or quenelles and then fried in butter), the hardest thing for me to get right is how much to mix them. I tend to undermix (I have the same problem with pie crust), which means the mixture doesn't always hold together as well as it should. Mix it a few more strokes, make your patties, let them rest for a couple of minutes (so the bread crumbs can hydrate and do their job of holding things together), and you should be good to go. -j |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
Mordechai Housman wrote on 11 Jun 2006 in rec.food.cooking
> "synergy3000" > wrote in message > ... > >I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers. > > They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > > remain as one piece? > > You might try a small amount of mayonnaise. It will also keep them > juicy, but it will probably affect the taste. > > Sometimes letting the 'burger patties' rest in the fridge for 30 minutes allows the egg and bread crumbs to bind the 'burger' together better. Other thoughts...maybe the onion should be diced finer? -- -Alan |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
"synergy3000" > wrote in message ... > I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers. > They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > remain as one piece? > > Thanks Turkey is often very lean, which is attractive from some points of view but makes the meat dry and in this case not hold together. How about adding some (say 25%) fatty pork mince and working the mix fairly hard before you make the patties. David |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
"notbob" > wrote in message
:: On 2006-06-11, BOB > wrote: :: ::: That was two words. :: :: Ok, I lied. :: :: nb Naw, just slightly confused. BOB |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
In article >,
synergy3000 > wrote: > I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers. > They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > remain as one piece? > > Thanks They are too lean. I mix turkey with either beef or pork to make burgers, but I usually just use it in recipes where I _want_ it to break apart. Turkey tacos are the gods. ;-d -- Peace! Om "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
synergy3000 wrote:
> I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers. > They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > remain as one piece? > > Thanks Must be too much fat in them. I've never had turkey burgers fall apart on me before. Here's a recipe from the 1980's version of Cooking Light Magazine (before they decided "Light" meant nothing but desserts). Turkey Burgers for Two 8 oz. lean ground turkey 1 green onion, minced 1/2 tsp. sesame oil 1 tsp. hot sauce (I used Tabasco) 2 tsp. low-salt soy sauce 1/8 tsp. ground ginger 2 toasted whole wheat buns desired vegeable toppings In a medium mixing bowl combine ground turkey, onion, soy sauce, ground ginger, sesame oil and Tabasco. Form mixture into patties about 3/4 inch thick. Broil 5-6 inches from heat (or from coals). Serve on buttered, toasted wheat buns with your choice of toppings. They don't fall apart :) Jill |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
synergy3000 wrote: > I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers. > They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > remain as one piece? > > Thanks You don't say how you're cooking them. Since I've had them fall apart on me when using a grill, I nipped that problem by using a rack...the type used to grill fish. It holds the burgers in. Don't add too much solid ingredients to the meat, too. That causes all sorts of burgers to fall apart. And don't pay attention to the ignorant berk who said they're falling apart because they have too much FAT in them. We all know how lean ground turkey is and often NEEDS some sort of moisture or fat to be ADDED. |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
synergy3000 wrote: > I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers. > They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > remain as one piece? Probably ground too coarsely... poultry for burgers needs to be ground twice. Sheldon |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
"jmcquown" wrote
> Must be too much fat in them. I've never had turkey burgers fall > apart on me before. > > Here's a recipe from the 1980's version of Cooking Light Magazine > (before they decided "Light" meant nothing but desserts). > > Turkey Burgers for Two > > 8 oz. lean ground turkey > 1 green onion, minced > 1/2 tsp. sesame oil > 1 tsp. hot sauce (I used Tabasco) > 2 tsp. low-salt soy sauce > 1/8 tsp. ground ginger > 2 toasted whole wheat buns > desired vegeable toppings > > In a medium mixing bowl combine ground turkey, onion, soy sauce, > ground ginger, sesame oil and Tabasco. Form mixture into patties > about 3/4 inch thick. Broil 5-6 inches from heat (or from coals). > Serve on buttered, toasted wheat buns with your choice of toppings. > > They don't fall apart :) > > Jill Jill, I'll try that! Have to hunt down "low salt" soy sauce though. Thanks, Andy |
Turkey burgers fall apart?
"jmcquown" > wrote in message ... > synergy3000 wrote: > > I use bread crumbs, eggs and the usual onions for my turkey burgers. > > They are usually soft and fall apart easily. Any tips for getting to > > remain as one piece? > > > > Thanks > > Must be too much fat in them. I've never had turkey burgers fall apart on > me before. > More ikely too little David |
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