Venison Sliders (serves 8)
1 lb. ground venison
1 lb. ground pork
2 slices bacon, cut in half lengthwise and then finely diced
~1 tbs. Worcestershire (~5 splashes worth)
Swiss cheese, sliced thin and cut into small 2" x 2" squares
16 dinner rolls, or small brioche buns if you're feeling bourgeois
canola oil
salt and pepper
- Add enough oil to coat a thick bottomed pan or cast iron skillet and heat over medium.
- When oil is hot but not smoking, season about 4 patties with s+p and add to pan, leaving plenty of space between each patty.
- Cook for ~3 min on first side. While they cook, toast your buns if you'd like.
- When sliders have developed a nice crust, flip over and cook for another min. Then, add a bit more s+p and cheese slices. Cover pan to melt for another 1-2 min.
- Once cheese has melted and the sliders are about medium, take them off the heat.
- Cook the next batch of sliders.
I would change a lot of things if I were to make this again. Because I'm not Cook's Illustrated, I won't actually try five more iterations and present the best one. What I will do is discuss what I might do differently if I give this another try. First, I would use a ratio of 3:1 or 2:1 for the amount of ground venison to ground pork. The 1:1 ratio tasted way too much like pork rather than venison. This isn't a pork burger recipe, after all; it's for motherf#%king deer burgers! I would also cut the amount of bacon down to 1 piece, and cut it into even smaller pieces using either a food processor or by finely mincing even after doing a dice. I might also skip the bacon altogether because its smokiness can overpower the venison flavor.
I also made the sliders a little too thick and forgot a cardinal rule of burger making, that (homemade) burgers will shrink towards the middle when cooking and be thicker cooked than raw. No one wants a baseball-shaped burger. So, try making them 1/2 in-3/4 in thick rather than drifting towards 1 in as I did. The picture of the raw patties were from the second batch and a better thickness than the thick slider in the finished picture. As for choice of cheese, choose a mild Swiss or Cheddar rather than an aggressive cheese more suitable for a beef hamburger. Don't try to get fancy and buy Emmental, which I did in a classic case of "when getting fancy goes wrong," or Gruyere, which was recommended to me at the Pasta Shop and an equally overpowering, poor choice.
Lastly, don't be a jackass like me and eschew humble dinner rolls for small French rolls. The correct ratio of meat to each bun should be ~1:1, for a total meat to bread ratio of 1:2. With these rolls, the ratio was more like 1:4. The bread overwhelmed the meat. Small brioche buns that aren't too thick would a good choice if you have to get bourgeois.
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