Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

used to go vic market, however have been going here for the last year(ish)

http://moorabbinwholesale.blogspot.com.au/

huge fresh fruit/veg market right near home = winning

burgers at home are just as quick and easy if you are prepared.

I buy all my fresh fruit, veggies and such from the market for the week and then get 2 weeks worth of meat from Tasman.

I always buy a bulk pack of premium mince and prep it for burgers.

I also go to Breadtop and buy 4-5 packets of savory rolls at a time and throw the packs in the freezer.

These are the absolute last word in awesome home burger buns and aren't even a little bit effected by the freezing process, just in the bags they already come in. they are small though, so you need to eat 2-4 each

The good thing about Tasman is that the way they pack their mince is directly from the mincer to the pack, so all the meat strands (and hence protien strands) are aligned and when not mixed up make unbeleiveable burger patties.

I get the mince and lay the strands (all facing the same way) on gladwrap to be a little bigger than the size of the buns and roll the shit up nice and tight to get a perfect pattie shape but with all the strands facing the same way. using a LOT of gladwrap.... a LOT

make a few logs and throw them all in the freezer too.

this process take like 5 mins at most.

To cook them, just remove from the freezer and once thawed enough cut into thick pattie slices (with the gladwrap still on and using a SHARP knife) and lay on bench to thaw properly and at room temp (doesn't take long after sliced)

heat a thick pan or the BBQ until red hot, salt the meat heavily with sea salt flakes and cook (still with the gladwrap on)

as soon as the gladwrap gets near the heat it shrinks and doesn't actually hit the heat and melt, cook one side, turn over and remove the gladwrap.

cook until still medium... and you have the most awesome burger pattie imaginable

Then I always ensure I have a pack of bega super slices in the fridge at all times (epic American burger style cheese) and can have burgers with minimal notice at any time.

the rest I change up based on what I feel like...

Googling nearest Tasman. Doing this next weekend.

oh there. always driven past, never been in. thought it was more about buying bulk food for green grocers. Will have to check it out as its not far from home either. they open Saturdays?

Finally got invited to a christmas function. drinks at Riverland at Fedsquare for the project team im contracting to. Got encouraged to "network"... pfft yeah right. Sink pots till from 3-6pm and then bail. ill be lucky to rock up in a collar. anticorporatelyf

burgers at home are just as quick and easy if you are prepared.

I buy all my fresh fruit, veggies and such from the market for the week and then get 2 weeks worth of meat from Tasman.

I always buy a bulk pack of premium mince and prep it for burgers.

I also go to Breadtop and buy 4-5 packets of savory rolls at a time and throw the packs in the freezer.

These are the absolute last word in awesome home burger buns and aren't even a little bit effected by the freezing process, just in the bags they already come in. they are small though, so you need to eat 2-4 each

The good thing about Tasman is that the way they pack their mince is directly from the mincer to the pack, so all the meat strands (and hence protien strands) are aligned and when not mixed up make unbeleiveable burger patties.

I get the mince and lay the strands (all facing the same way) on gladwrap to be a little bigger than the size of the buns and roll the shit up nice and tight to get a perfect pattie shape but with all the strands facing the same way. using a LOT of gladwrap.... a LOT

make a few logs and throw them all in the freezer too.

this process take like 5 mins at most.

To cook them, just remove from the freezer and once thawed enough cut into thick pattie slices (with the gladwrap still on and using a SHARP knife) and lay on bench to thaw properly and at room temp (doesn't take long after sliced)

heat a thick pan or the BBQ until red hot, salt the meat heavily with sea salt flakes and cook (still with the gladwrap on)

as soon as the gladwrap gets near the heat it shrinks and doesn't actually hit the heat and melt, cook one side, turn over and remove the gladwrap.

cook until still medium... and you have the most awesome burger pattie imaginable

Then I always ensure I have a pack of bega super slices in the fridge at all times (epic American burger style cheese) and can have burgers with minimal notice at any time.

the rest I change up based on what I feel like...

Mmhmmm... this IS a tasty burger

Googling nearest Tasman. Doing this next weekend.

remember to make sure the meat is all facing the same way and maybe a diameter of 1 cm BIGGER than the bun (will shrink when coooked) and to wrap it nice and evenly with a lot of clingwrap

also having an industrial sized 600m roll of clingwrap helps

Mmhmmm... this IS a tasty burger

You mind if I have some of your tasty beverage to wash this down?

christmas part #3 tonight,

no one was all nurses

no two, my upper management so had to behave,

tonight is the office one SO noone from my department or above, will be mainly Asian girls who don't drink so the bar all mine!

A friend of mine was a Mi Goreng regular back in the day, then went off it for ages.

returned a year or so later to it and couldnt believe he used to eat the stuff.

Maccas is in the same boat. i feel ill after a burger so will stick to the icecreams.

government should impose a tax on mcdonalds (or even just big brand fast foods) like cigarettes or something.

Sucks to be you lot; I enjoy my $8 salt meal prepared in 3 minutes. Always hits the spot as an alternative to a greasy ass kebab or souvlaki. It's a frikken burger, why get snobby and hipster over it. Meat, cheese, bun, other shit.

A friend of mine was a Mi Goreng regular back in the day, then went off it for ages.

returned a year or so later to it and couldnt believe he used to eat the stuff.

Maccas is in the same boat. i feel ill after a burger so will stick to the icecreams.

government should impose a tax on mcdonalds (or even just big brand fast foods) like cigarettes or something.

Haven't had Mi Goreng in a while. But I don't have a problem eating it again lol

Sucks to be you lot; I enjoy my $8 salt meal prepared in 3 minutes. Always hits the spot as an alternative to a greasy ass kebab or souvlaki. It's a frikken burger, why get snobby and hipster over it. Meat, cheese, bun, other shit.

because better is better

simple concept

better1


ˈbɛtə/


adjective


adjective: better


1.

more desirable, satisfactory, or effective.

"we're hoping for better weather tomorrow"



synonyms:

superior, finer, of higher quality, greater, in a different class, one step ahead;
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Yea that's a fair assumption. I'm presuming they call them solid lifters as they have no moving parts like hydro lifters. 
    • I believe you're confusing WMI with water injection. Looking at that graph, the 93aki+WMI car is making more power than C16 race gas. Boost juice, which is what I also run, is Snow Performances 50/50 premix. 
    • GCG is a good company, they're a major distributor for Garrett in Japan as well.
    • Nah, OEM washer bottle and brake fluid reservoirs are fine I don't know what it is with the plastic that Mazda used, some plastics, like the washer bottle and brake fluid res are fine, and still look new after 20 years use, where as the coolant expansion tank, and PS reservoir, that I replaced with new OEM items when I first got the car, turned yellow and started getting brittle a few years later If the dirty yellow stained plastics didn't trigger me there wouldn't be an issue, but they did, much like the battery bracket....... Meh As for going back to work full time to support car stuff, nope, why, because I own a Mazda NC MX5, not a Nissan R series Skyline 🤣
    • I've never heard of CJ-motor, so can't advise you on them. I'd just go straight to GCG for a GCG highflow though. Seems no point to use a middleman. I'm somewhat surprised that the price on the CJ site is lower than the GCG retail price. Even though CJ would get a discount of some sort, you would hardly expect them to give up so much margin. Maybe the price is out of date? Having said that "I'd go to GCG"...when I did my highflow, I went to Hypergear. I did this https://hypergearturbos.com/product/rb25dethighflow/#tab-dyno-results with the R34 OP6 450HP profile. With the BB centre (extra $400) and intially with the standard boost actuator, but I eventually got him to send me the high pressure one when I got to the point of being able to actually use it. Ends up costing the same sort of money as the GCG highflow, but this is, of course, the turbo that I KNOW has a shorter length core and so moves the comp cover rearwards. The GCG apparently doesn't do that. My mechanic also swears by the GCG highflow, given that we have another turbo rebuilder who does something essentialy the same as theirs, using Garrett wheels. He says it stands up at really low revs and makes good power. I haven't pushed my HG highflow past ~240-250rwkW yet (should have a little more in it, but unclear how much) and it does have a fairly gentle boost ramp. OK, it's much better now that I have gotten my boost controller tuned up on it.  A lot of my earlier unhappiness was because I couldn't keep the wastegate flap as closed as it needed to be (including some mechanical issues). I'd still prefer it to boost up nearly as quickly as the stocker, and it certainly a bit slower than that. So maybe the GCG one is worth the first look (for you).
×
×
  • Create New...