From Deseret News archives:

What happened to the well-done hamburger?

Published: Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2008 12:49 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Is it rare to find a well-done burger?

In the past few months, on three occasions I've noticed restaurant burgers that were pinkish-red in the center.

In the first case, it was a plump bison burger I ordered for lunch at the Metropolitan. When I asked the manager about the pinkish interior, he told me the restaurant cooks bison burgers to "just past medium." He assured me that the staff grinds the bison on the premises, so they feel confident about its safety.

I realize that bison (or buffalo) is very lean, so it's dry and sawdusty when overcooked. But I've always been a well-done wimp, having done my share of stories on E. coli and salmonella poisoning. I feel better sacrificing a little juiciness in order to avoid any pink in my burgers — bison, beef or otherwise.

In a second case, I took a co-worker out to lunch at Bambara. The outside of his burger was browned, but the center was reddish-pink. He asked the waiter to have it cooked through, which was done without hesitation.

Story continues below
In the third case, I was at The Counter, a new burger restaurant at The Gateway. As we were ordering, the waiter told us that beef burgers there are always cooked to medium, so you should expect to a little red in the center, adding, "because we know where our beef comes from."

I said that was all well and good, but I still prefer my ground beef cooked to well-done. The waiter was OK with that. My burger came out with a grayish interior, but I thought it was still juicy and flavorful.

In all three cases, they were higher-end burgers costing at least $9 apiece. Maybe it's because I don't usually order them outside of fast-food restaurants, but I just assumed that burgers were supposed to be cooked "well-done," all gray in the center, without having to specifically order them that way.

When ordering steak, you're asked your preferences on doneness — rare, medium, well-done. That's because theoretically, the inside of the meat carcass is considered sterile and the outside is seared to kill any germs that the outside of the meat may have been exposed to.

But with ground meat, the sterile inside and possibly contaminated exterior of the meat gets ground up and mixed up together.

Recent comments

if you want your burger well done...
when ordering say: "I'll take...

simple solution? | Dec. 8, 2008 at 11:40 a.m.

If you think you can get a rare burger here, try Europe. I'd...

EM | Dec. 4, 2008 at 1:17 p.m.

What I got from the article is that some restaurants routinely don't...

to ALC | Dec. 3, 2008 at 9:04 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

Go ahead and try Adleman's game plan, he hasn't ever beaten LA in any...

Casual sex not always bad for health?

If the study were comparing those who engage in sex with those who do not...

So delusional. You forget that the Gov and the First Dude were once...

The repubs put our country totally in the toilet and then we hear these...

I remember a few years ago when non-bcs conferences and teams complained...

'It's too bad the spanish govt. felt they had to restrict these young women's...

Brother Chuck Shroeder: I, for one, can see your frustration here and admire...

2) UTA only serves 1% of Utah's commuting working population (supposedly...

I'm a true fan of Sarah Palin. When she goes up against Obama in 2012,...

Spanish gov't to change abortion bill

The bill has an exception for that circumstance.

Advertisements