processhead I have found that it not only varies from carrier to carrier, but where you are at, & who the driver is. When we were in Texas I used to rave about FedEx. It was a very private area, they could drive right through the front, & drop at the front door, pick up & all. UPS was very sloppy with their driving skills, etc. there. I will leave it at that. Here, DHL was hands down the best, but they left the building here over ten years ago at least. They would pick-up & deliver perfectly. Even brought treats for ol Duke the Healer we had then. Now it depends on the driver & they all go back & forth with the various carriers, for the most part UPS was taking the prize most of the time. Someone is here most all the time too, but some insist on walking to front doors & doing a stop & drop, no indication that they ever arrived until we find something on the front porch that we rarely use or in the bushes. We try to get them to just use the drive so they can just drive around & straight through to make it easy on them & drop at the garage or back door, that way if they are in a hurry or doing the stop & drop, it is OK & it makes their job easier too. We have tried to keep them informed over the years personally & in writing. So long as they keep a regular driver, which they all used to keep, we are good & have a happy relationship. Unfortunately, that does not seem to be the case so much anymore though as they change a lot, folks quit & move on, etc. It just is not what it used to be. For shipping, we have usually just found the USPS worked out the very best & the price was right & more convenient. However, they refused to ship something recently because it was Ginger Ale, a liquid. Somebody was in a pinch I am certain. We ended up having to drive to town to one of those UPS stores as UPS no longer takes packages for shipping here anymore at their yard not too far away. The cost was about three times the cost of the USPS. Please Pardon my rant, but that is the way I see it, they have all gone way down hill & sadly to say, are no longer consistent. Part of all that is another story for another day between the employees & the employers most likely.
Burger shrinkage problem
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Mornin’ Meat Masters. I need some help. Have a recipe I like to make burgers but seem to get an awful large amount of shrinkage when grilling them. Was hoping one of you smart peeps might have a remedy for this, thanks.
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Tomg
The amount of shrinkage you get on cooking burgers will probably be due to the fat and moisture content, and how high of a heat is used during cooking. The more fat and moisture, plus the higher heat used will cause more shrinkage.My first thought would be to try cooking with a lower heat if you don’t want to change the rest of your recipe.
Hopefully someone else here has some more advice to share as well!
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Thanks Austin,
I did have the grill on high to get the grill marks set on the burgers and may have caused them to cook too quick. There is a bit of fat and moisture in these, so that may effect them too. I’ll forego the grill marks on the next batch and plan to allow extra time so they cook slower and see haw that does, thanks.
Tom -
If your shrinkage problem persists more than likely you fat content may need some help try adding some angus beef to your current mix and see if that helps.
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I for one am not a big fan of grilled BBQ burgers. BBQ grilling tends to dry out the burger to much unless you cook slow and long. If you want the taste of the burger to come through use a good seasoned cast iron skillet and sear both sides and lower heat to below medium heat to finish. You can do on the grill with a cast iron skillet also to retain the juice and full size patty.
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One more thing on the burger shrinkage is grind your own. Big grocery’s chains and packing plants add moisture through adding water or ice cubes. it is the cheapest thing to add to increase your poundage when selling packaged burger. One other thing to get off my chest is when buying a box of the grilling burger boxes in the big grocery chains in there frozen section. Flip the box over and see if you can pronounce all the ingredients on the side of the box. Grind your own you know what goes into it. You don’t have to have a 600lb per hour capacity grinder to make you own burger. Grind your own.
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Denny Great point Denny! I will add one more thing that is sort of related. I have been using our General Tso Marinade on chicken here for my dinners and lunch. I generally don’t purchase organic chicken as I don’t see the benefit but my wife has started eating chicken again after years of being a vegetarian, I consider this an enormous win for me by the way. So she wanted me to get her some organic chicken and I used the same General Tso Marinade on that chicken and it was a noticeably better taste. The difference wasn’t really that it was organic, it was that it was not pumped full of water! When they pump the chicken full of water any marinade you use is not going to be able to penetrate as well as a non-pumped chicken breast. Now, was the taste difference worth paying more than double the cost? Probably not but it was a noticeable difference.
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One other thing you can do to help burger shrinkage is put a thumb indention in the middle of the burger. It won’t stop the shrinkage but it will be a very noticeable difference next to one that doesn’t have an indention!
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