Burger science
Juicy or dry. The difference often comes down to what happens to the fat inside your patty during cooking — and that is largely a question of temperature.
Fat rendering is the process by which solid fat inside a burger patty melts into liquid during cooking. Different fats melt at different temperatures, and the cooking temperature determines how much fat renders into juiciness versus how much drips away or is expelled by contracting proteins. Getting this right is one of the defining skills of a great burger cook.
A great burger patty is juicy. Not greasy, not dry — juicy. The difference between those three outcomes is largely determined by what happens to the fat inside the patty during cooking, and that is a function of temperature.
Rendering is the process by which solid fat melts into liquid. In a burger patty, the fat is present both as intramuscular fat — marbling within the muscle tissue — and as connective tissue containing collagen and fat cells distributed throughout the grind. When the patty is heated, this fat transitions from solid to liquid, which is what creates the sensation of juiciness in the bite.
But rendering is not an all-or-nothing process. Different fats melt at different temperatures, and the temperature at which you cook the patty determines how much fat renders into the meat versus how much liquefies and drips away from it.
Beef fat begins to soften and melt at relatively low temperatures — around 40–50°C (104–122°F). At these temperatures, fat transitions from firm to soft but does not fully liquefy. Full liquefaction of most beef fat occurs between 130–160°C (266–320°F), depending on the specific fatty acid composition of the fat.
This matters because:
One of the reasons griddle cooking produces juicier burgers than grill cooking is fat management. On a grill with open flames or heating elements below the patty, rendered fat drips down and is lost. On a flat griddle, rendered fat remains in contact with the patty’s lower surface and continues to baste it as it cooks. This is a significant difference in the final juiciness of the burger.
It is also one of the reasons a griddle can produce the Maillard crust more reliably than a grill: the griddle surface maintains consistent, even contact heat that the open gaps in a grill cannot provide.
The fat ratio of the beef used to make the patty determines how much fat is available to render. A very lean patty — say 90% lean / 10% fat — has limited fat to render. At cooking temperatures above 65°C, the proteins contract and squeeze out the available moisture, and without sufficient fat to compensate, the patty becomes dry. A patty with 20–30% fat has a much larger reservoir of rendering fat, which maintains perceived juiciness even at higher internal temperatures. What is the ideal fat ratio for a burger? →
At BB52, the griddle temperature is calibrated to achieve the right fat rendering within the patty while developing the Maillard crust on the exterior. Neither is accidental — both are the result of understanding what is happening inside the beef during cooking. That precision is part of what defines a craft kitchen. What is the Maillard reaction? →
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