Chorizo burgers with manchego cheese sauce

  • Portion size: Serves 4
  • Prep time 20 min, plus up to 1 hour to come to temperature. Cook time 10 min
  • Difficulty: easy
Editorial director, delicious.

These chorizo burgers with manchego cheese sauce by delicious. editorial director Laura Rowe are just the thing if you fancy a change from classic barbecue burgers. “If you’re coming round mine this summer, expect this Spanish-inspired spin on the traditional,” says Laura.

  • Flavour and fat hack: “I’ve experimented with bits in burgers – onions, breadcrumbs, even gherkins – but there’s little that adds to the burger experience. Because a) we’re all here to taste the beef, folks! b) bits can affect how the patty holds together, especially on the barbecue. The exception, though, is more meat. And for a shortcut to flavour and juiciness, the trick I advise is cooking chorizo. This Spanish sausage does all the hard work for you – it’s ready seasoned with salt, garlic and smoked paprika, and the pork fat acts as a natural baster for your beef.”
  • Swap burger sauce for romesco: “I’m a big advocate for sauce. In my twist you get the sharpness, sweetness, saltiness and creaminess of a traditional burger sauce in buckets with a romesco made with pickled and raw walnuts (food writer Nikki Segnit notes their affinity with beef in her first Flavour Thesaurus book). Roasted red peppers from a jar are a good storecupboard standby but if you have the time, barbecuing whole fresh peppers is worth it for extra sweetness and char (grill until blackened all over, cover in a bowl until cool, then peel and deseed).
  • Delicious cheesy sauce: “No plastic cheese required – instead you make another sauce from Spanish manchego, fresh cream cheese and our chief melter, mozzarella, all of which drape beautifully over our finished patties (and/or act as an indulgent dip for crisps, too).

Try our best-ever classic cheeseburger for comparison…

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Before you start

No barbecue? You can cook these in a griddle pan over a high heat instead.

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Ingredients

  • 440g beef chuck with 15-20% fat, minced twice or 15-20% fat ready ground beef mince
  • 160g cooking chorizo, skin removed
  • 375g roasted red peppers, from a jar or from the barbecue
  • 80g walnut halves
  • 70g (about 3) pickled walnuts
  • 1 large garlic clove
  • 50g extra-virgin olive oil
  • 100g manchego cheese, coarsely grated
  • 4 tbsp cream cheese
  • 4 brioche buns, halved
  • 4 tbsp aioli (optional)
  • 4 handfuls rocket

Specialist kit

  • Barbecue
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Method

  1. Light the barbecue. If using a gas barbecue, wait until the grill is red-hot; if using charcoal, wait until the coals are glowing white.
  2. In a large mixing bowl, mash the mince and chorizo together with a clean hand until the chorizo is evenly distributed. Divide into 4 balls and shape into 2cm thick patties. Set aside for up to an hour.
  3. Meanwhile, make the romesco. In a blender, whizz together 250g of the peppers with the walnut halves, pickled walnuts, garlic and oil until smooth. Slice the remaining pepper into strips.
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  5. Cook the burgers over the hottest part of the barbecue (directly above the hottest coals or flame) for 4 minutes on each side. Leave to rest for a few minutes before you load up the buns.
  6. Meanwhile, in a small pan over a medium heat or on the cooler side of the barbecue, melt the two cheeses, stirring regularly. Once melted and combined, remove from the heat.
  7. Split the buns, add them cut-side down to the barbecue and grill for 20 seconds until lightly toasted. Spread the tops with aioli, if using, and the bases with the romesco. Top with a burger patty, pour over the manchego melt and sprinkle with pepper. Top with a few rocket leaves and the red pepper strips, then close the buns.

Nutrition

  • 853kcals Calories
  • 57g (22g saturated) Fat
  • 48g Protein
  • 40g (17g sugars) Carbs
  • 4.7g Fibre
  • 3.1g Salt

Quick wins & tips

Next time: Try stirring the romesco into pasta with butter beans and lots of black pepper.

Make Ahead

It’s worth removing the meat from the fridge, making the patties and storing them at room temperature up to an hour before cooking. This will help avoid shocking the meat over the intense heat, giving you a quicker cook and a more tender burger. And while it’s tempting to serve a burger straight from the flames, give it a few minutes to rest before popping it into a bun.

Cook smarter

Since we’re using chorizo too, beef mince with 15-20% fat is fine. I get mince from my local butcher, Ginger Pig. Ask your butcher to mince beef chuck (a flavourful and cheap shoulder cut) twice over for a finer texture, more even fat distribution and a firmer patty – although ready ground will work perfectly well.

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