Pimento-Jalapeño Cheeseburgers Recipe

Here's how to spice up a backyard barbecue.

By
J. Kenji López-Alt
Kenji Lopez Alt
Culinary Consultant
Kenji is the former culinary director for Serious Eats and a current culinary consultant for the site. He is also a New York Times food columnist and the author of The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science.
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Updated April 14, 2024
A fully loaded pimento cheeseburger with jalapenos, tomato, and lettuce.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Why It Works

  • We process our pimento cheese until almost—but not quite—smooth so that it melts and stays emulsified as it cooks on top of the burger.
  • Using fresh ground beef ensures extra-juicy patties packed with flavor.
  • Stacking the burgers with the toppings underneath makes for better structural integrity and prevents the bottom bun from going soggy.


Regular old cheeseburgers are all well and good (and really, if you're doing them right, there's nothing regular or old about them), but having recently been exposed to the glory that is a pimento cheese-topped burger at Jeff Mason's It's Burger Time in San Francisco, I just haven't been able to get the idea out of my mind.

A fully loaded pimento burger with the top bun laying next to it. The burger has lettuce, tomato, and jalalpenos.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

There's something about the way the caviar of the South (as pimento cheese is affectionately known) melts into a rich, oozy coating, its acidity and punch of pimento flavor accenting a thick and juicy grilled burger in a way that regular cheese just can't. Add some pickled jalapeño peppers in there in place of standard pickles and you've got yourself one hell of a fiery backyard treat.

There's really not much to say about this recipe that isn't immediately obvious from the title and the photos. It's a grilled cheeseburger slathered with pimento cheese and served with sliced pickled jalapeños. Ok, there's a little bit more to it than that—with simple recipes, the beauty is always in the details—but it's still pretty darn easy.

Burger toppings on a plate, including buns, jalapenos, tomatoes, lettuce, and onions, next to a small bowl of pimento cheese with a spoon.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

It starts with really good pimento cheese. The version I use here is based on Josh Bousel's simple recipe, which combines sharp cheddar with mayonnaise, chopped pimentos, and hot sauce. Depending on whom you ask, pimento cheese can vary from extremely chunky—Josh's recipe is straight-up grated cheese dressed with mayonnaise— to a mixture that's processed until nearly smooth.

I tried a few different degrees of chunkiness to top my burgers and found that the chunkiest mixtures didn't fare very well—the mayonnaise broke and dripped away, leaving you with a greasy sheen of half melted cheese. The best was a moderately chunky texture achieved by pulsing the ingredients in a food processor a few times.

For the burgers, I like to grind my own meat, or at the very least, have a butcher grind meat fresh for me. You need a thick, juicy burger to stand up to the cheese, and a thick burger is at its tenderest and juiciest when it's ground fresh and packed just tightly enough to hold together on a hot grill.

The standard rules for grilling burgers apply here. Shape the patties with a slight indentation to prevent them from bulging as they cook. Only salt the patties on the exterior (to prevent them from getting tough or sausage-like). Cook them hot and cover the grill to prevent flare-ups, and use a thermometer to make sure you hit that target temperature.

The one difference? A big ol' dollop of pimento cheese applied about a minute before the patties are done cooking.

A burger on a grill with melted pimento cheese.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Once it's applied, cover the grill again to prevent flare-ups and to allow the cheese to melt over the burger patties.

Like a good steak, your burgers should rest for a moment or two after cooking to prevent them from losing juices too rapidly when you bite into them.

That resting period is a good time to toast your buns and assemble your toppings. The order in which they go is not random! I pretty much always place my toppings underneath the patty—I suppose I should call them bottomings (not nearly as dirty as it sounds). This not only helps the burger stay together better as you eat it (toppings on top lead to a top bun that slips and slides around. This doesn't happen with the bottom bun), but it also creates a moisture barrier to prevent your bottom bun from getting overly soggy.

To bottom my burger, I layer on shredded iceberg lettuce (shreds are great for absorbing juices and creating a nice non-slip surface for the remaining toppings), slivered onions, a fat slice of tomato (so long as I can find a decent one—not always easy!), and a handful of those pickled jalapeños.

Now, open wide, squeeze down, and take a bite, if you dare. But get ready, because you are about to not-quite-literally get knocked on your ass with an explosion of flavor.

This is the kind of burger that makes you wish that some enterprising late night infomercial maven would invent a belt-mounted napkin-dispenser holster.

June 2014

Recipe Details

Pimento-Jalapeño Cheeseburgers Recipe

Prep 40 mins
Cook 55 mins
Active 30 mins
Freezing Time 20 mins
Total 115 mins
Makes 4 burgers

Ingredients

  • 1 cup Pimento Cheese
  • 1 1/2 pounds beef chuck, cut into 1-inch cubes (see notes)
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 4 soft hamburger buns
  • 1 1/2 cups shredded iceberg lettuce
  • 1/2 small white or yellow onion, thinly sliced
  • 4 slices ripe tomato
  • 3/4 cup sliced pickled jalapeño peppers

Directions

  1. Place pimento cheese in food processor. Pulse until finely chopped, 6 to 8 short pulses. Transfer to a small bowl with a rubber spatula and wash food processor bowl if using to grind meat (see step 3).

  2. To grind with a meat grinder: Place grinding shaft, feed tube, plate, die, and screw of a meat grinder into the freezer along with a large mixing bowl. Spread beef chunks evenly in a single layer on a large plate or rimmed baking sheet. Place meat in freezer and freeze until starting to get firm around edges but still malleable, about 20 minutes. Set up meat grinder with 3/8-inch plate. Grind meat into the cold bowl. Working quickly, grind meat again using 1/4-inch plate. If grinder or meat begins to get too warm during grinding process, return to freezer for 10 minutes before continuing to grind.

  3. To grind with a food processor: Spread beef chunks evenly in a single layer on a large plate or rimmed baking sheet. Place in freezer and freeze until starting to get firm around edges but still malleable, about 20 minutes. Working in three batches, place meat cubes in the work bowl of a food processor. Pulse until finely chopped, about 15 to 20 short pulses. Transfer to a bowl and repeat with remaining beef.

  4. Form beef into 4 patties about 1/2-inch wider than burger buns with a slight depression in the center to account for bulging as they cook. Season generously with salt and pepper and refrigerate until ready to cook.

  5. Light one chimney full of charcoal. When all the charcoal is lit and covered with gray ash, spread evenly over one side of coal grate. Alternatively, set half the burners of a gas grill to high heat. Set cooking grate in place, cover grill, and allow to preheat for 5 minutes. Clean and oil the grilling grate. Place burgers directly over hot coals, cover with vents open, and cook, turning occasionally, until well charred and center of burgers register 110°F (43°C) on an instant read thermometer, about 5 minutes.

    A burger on a grill.

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

  6. Spread pimento cheese evenly on top of burgers and continue to cook until cheese is melted and burgers register 125°F (51°C) for medium rare or 135°F (57°C) for medium, 1 to 2 minutes longer. Transfer burgers to a large plate.

    Adding pimento cheese on top of a burger on a grill.

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

  7. Toast buns over center of grill until golden brown and warmed through. Transfer buns to a large cutting board. Top bottom buns with shredded lettuce, slivered onions, tomato slices, and jalapeño slices.

    The prepared bun with toppings: lettuce, tomato, and jalapenos, waiting for the grilled burger.

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

  8. Top with burger patties, close with top bun, and serve immediately.

Special Equipment

Food processor, grill

Notes

For better flavor, use a combination of short rib, brisket, and sirloin in place of the ground chuck. Freshly ground meat can also be used in place of home-ground. If using fresh ground beef, skip steps 2 and 3.

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