YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    The Secret Ingredient Sauce that Will Make Your Burgers Irresistible

    Summer burgers benefit from the perfect sauce.By Charles Perry

    This is the prime season of the year for throwing burgers on the barbecue, and there's nothing I like better. Except maybe these exotic burgers with sour cream sauce.

    RELATED: How about a compound butter sauce to dress up your steak?

    You don't have to fire up a barbecue to cook them, so they're an all-year recipe. You certainly can grill them, but they're even a little more flavorful if you fry them (not that there has ever been a law against putting a frying pan on a grill). They're irresistible on a bun or toast, but they would also be at home at a candle-lit dinner with flowers and the good napkins, accompanied by a mixed green salad.

    RELATED: Tips for better grilling.

    The Franco-Russian recipe makes a pan gravy from that ultra-Russian ingredient sour cream, and then, at least in the French version, it makes it more haute-cuisine-y by diluting the cream with a bit of stock.

    Stock? Huh. Try Dijon mustard. Sour cream and Dijon are flavors made for each other, and this sauce is so good I can hardly stand it.

    RELATED: Turn shredded beef into a great salad.

    If you're grilling the burgers, there's no deglazing step - you just mix the mustard and sour cream. This recipe can also be adapted as a party appetizer, the kind of thing people spear with a toothpick while they're milling around. In that case, form the meat into 25 or 30 meatballs, and when the sour cream gravy is ready, serve them in it.

    RELATED: Tips for picking the best cuts of beef.

    Punched-Up Burgers With Sour Cream Sauce

    Serves 4

    Ingredients

    1 small onion

    ½ cup coarse bread crumbs such as panko

    2 pounds ground beef, preferably 90% lean

    ½ teaspoon salt

    ¼ teaspoon pepper

    ⅓ cup flour for dredging

    3 tablespoons butter or oil

    ½ cup sour cream

    2 tablespoons Dijon mustard

    Optional: a few sprigs of fresh dill or cilantro

    Directions

    1. Process the onion in a food processor to a smooth consistency. Strain the onion solids from the juice in a strainer and discard them. You should have at least ½ cup onion juice. Mix the onion juice with the bread crumbs and allow them to sit for 2 minutes. Lightly squeeze out the excess juice.

    2. Mix the bread crumb and onion juice mixture with the beef, salt and pepper and knead to an even consistency. Divide into 8 patties.

    3. Put about ⅓ cup flour in a paper bag, put the patties in the bag in several batches and shake the bag to dredge. Remove the patties and arrange on a work surface.

    4. Heat the oil in a large pan and fry the meat over medium heat in several batches until thoroughly brown on all sides, about 8-10 minutes per batch. As a batch is done, keep warm while finishing the rest.

    5. Discard the cooking oil and deglaze the pan with the sour cream over medium-low heat. When all the brown bits have been dissolved, stir in the mustard. Taste and add more mustard or sour cream as desired.

    6. To serve, put two patties on a plate and top with the sour cream sauce and optional fresh herb garnish.

    Zester Daily contributor Charles Perry is a former rock 'n' roll journalist turned food historian who worked for the Los Angeles Times' award-winning Food section, where he twice was a finalist for the James Beard award.

    Also fresh on Zester Daily:

    What was Julia Child's first culinary love?

    Who is making booze with the Amish?

    What's a sweet summer treat that uses sour cherries?

    Cocktails with bitters are better - so what's the recipe for Peach Diddy?

    SUPPER CLUB PICK

    • Childhood Favorites from the Shine Supper Club
      View Photos
      Childhood Favorites from the Shine Supper Club

      My after-school snack was a sacred ritual. I sat on the carpet in my parents' bedroom at a low table, the television turned to "I Dream of Jeannie," and ate a peanut butter and honey sandwich cut into neat squares. I wasn't fussy about crusts. I just loved the sticky pairing of creamy peanut butter with syrupy golden sweetness drizzled from a honey bear in diagonals across the soft white bread. Nothing else--save for maybe apples and peanut butter in a pinch--could have made for as sweet an