Kangaroo Burgers
A simple recipe for home made kangaroo burgers
Prep Time1 hour hr
Cook Time20 minutes mins
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Contemporary Australian
Keyword: burger, kangaroo, mince, roo
Servings: 50 burger patties
- 10 kg kangaroo meat (or venison)
- 2.5 kg beef fat
Prepare the roo meat by cutting into two centimetre cubes, removing as much tendon, sinew and muscle sheath as possible.
Spread the cubed meat across a tray and place this in the freezer. Cube the beef fat and add this to the freezer separately. Remove the meat once the outside feels hard, but before the meat has frozen solid. You want the mincer, meat and fat to be as cold as possible. Keeping the temperature as low as possible will prevent the fat from rendering as you run it through the mincer and reduce the likelihood of clogging the mincer too. If the fat does render you end up with a greasy mess that is not much good for anything.
Mix the nearly frozen meat and fat together evenly and run through the mincer. I prefer to use the coarse plate for burger mince.
Form the minced meat into patties with medium pressure, too soft and they fall apart. A burger mould is helpful but not necessary. Do not add salt or seasoning before forming into patties, salt will start denaturing the proteins and you will end up with a sausage patty not a burger patty.
When it comes to cooking the burgers, season them immediately before placing them on a smokingly hot plate. A generous sprinkle of salt is sufficient seasoning in my view, but steak seasoning or garlic herb mix will impart a little extra flavour. Slap the burgers firmly onto the hot plate to ensure maximum contact and surface caramelisation. Resist the urge to turn them until they are cooked half way through.Serve with whatever burger toppings you like best. Personally I enjoy, lettuce, bacon, blue cheese and caramelised onion chutney.