This recipe lets you customize as many burgers as you like. You can make each patty plain, or you can add any number of toppings before wrapping them up in aluminum foil. Why do we wrap the frozen patties and not just set them on the rack in the pot? Because the juices stay with the burgers,rather than running into the water below, giving the patties a much “beefier” flavor. Notice that you must make your own patties, ones that are larger than the standard, 3- or 4-ounce burgers sometimes sold frozen in boxes. We find that those smaller patties cook too quickly and dry out in the Instant Pot. (They’re best for the grill, even when still frozen.) You can prepare the patties for this recipe far in advance— if, say, you’ve bought fresh ground beef ahead of time. Make 6-ounce patties that are about 1/2 inch thick and add the toppings of your choice (if any). Wrap
each patty individually and store them in the freezer for several months. And one more thing: Label them so you’ll know which patty has which toppings (if any). You can make beef and pork burgers with a 50-50 combo of ground beef and ground pork. We recommend using lean ground beef to go with the fattier ground pork. But do cook these patties following the “no pink” instructions (for food safety reasons).
Course
Difficulty
Duration
Cooking Technique
Keywords
30-60 min,
6 burgers,
american,
brown or white mushroom,
Bruce Weinstein and Mark Scarbrough,
butter,
contributed,
cook 45 min,
dinner,
dried seasoning blend,
easy,
frozen burger patty,
frozen chopped onion,
kids,
main course,
max pressure cook,
modern,
peeled and minced garlic,
piece of aluminum foil,
prep 5 min,
pressure cook,
table salt and ground black pepper,
thin fresh jalapeno slices,
thin slice of semi-firm cheese,
water
Prep Time
5 min
Cook Time
45 min
Servings
6 burgers
Ingredients
Instructions
Notes