Our Benedict Burger

“Our Benedict Burger”
Sliced Eggs, Canadian bacon and Muenster Cheese Burger
Patti and I have set one night a week just for us. It’s our date night. We usually put something special on the grill but sometimes we cook inside. We always eat outside on our patio where it is very comfortable with a rainforest theme. Wood burning stove, little lights, candles, lanterns and surround sound. We enjoy a little wine, or strawberry margaritas using frozen strawberries for ice, good food, music and sometimes a dance or two…
Tonight, one of my oldest friends, whom I have only seen four or five times in the last 15 years, is coming with the new lady in his life. Little did he realize he was setting her up for a seat as a “Crash Test Dummy”. Patti and I wanted to try out our new Benedict Burgers and Chipotle Nachos with a taste test. I am afraid I set Peggy on fire with our Chipotle Nachos. Good 1st impression, you think? Jack on the other hand cleaned his plate and hers… Patti loves when we do these. She has half for dinner and the other half the next day, like a cold meatloaf sandwich.
We did our Benedict Burger with an Eggs Benedict theme. We Stufz ¾ a pound of sausage with eggs, Canadian Bacon and Muenster cheese and topped it off with Patti’s Garlicky Hollandaise sauce. These burgers can be served either with or without a bun. To give you an idea just how big this burger is we used 3 pounds of sausage for 4 Stufz burgers.
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes smoke, 10 minutes cooking
Grill: Royall 3000 Wood Pellet Grill/Smoker
Pellets: House Blend: 60% hickory, 20% oak, 20% cherry
Ingredients: 4 Burgers
3 lbs. bulk breakfast sausage
Stuffing:
Canadian bacon, thinly sliced
Muenster cheese, thinly sliced
4 hard boiled eggs, thinly sliced

Patti’s Lite Hollandaise Sauce
Patti’s Lite Hollandaise Sauce
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 5 minutes
½ cup our light garlic mayonnaise
½ cup plain non-fat yogurt
1 Tablespoon Dijon mustard
1 Tablespoon lemon juice, fresh if possible
1 teaspoon fresh dill
½ teaspoon white pepper
Directions: Patti’s Garlic Hollandaise Sauce
Mix all ingredients until smooth. Simmer on low heat stirring constantly until heated through.
Directions: Stuffing Mix
The cheese will be easier to work if you let it come to room temperature first. Patti uses a potato peeler to shave thin slices of cheese off the chunk. This makes it real easy to get thin slices and it melts quicker.

Fill the pocket, don’t forget the cheese…
Directions: “Stufz” the burgers
Form the pocket and fill the top with your meat. Then, add your filling to the pocket. Be sure not to overfill by going above the sides. Keep the sides clear of any filling so you get a good bond with the top piece.
I put in as much bacon, eggs and cheese as I could without going over the top.
These burgers were 3/4 pounders and you can make them smaller by cutting back on the meat. But, I don’t know why you would want to do anything like that. These were perfect. The key we found was to take the amount of meat you want for a patty, and then take 1/3 of it out for the top.

A pound of Sausage and Stufzing and 2 ½ inches thick
Cooking Directions: Royall 3000 Wood Pellet Grill/Smoker
Open the lid and set the dial to “Smoke”, turn it on. After about five minutes you can shut the lid. Give it about 10 minutes to heat up. Patti has lined the drip pan with foil for me, it makes for easier clean up.
I used our Grill Grates tonight. So, I put them on now to let them start heating.
Place everything directly onto the grill and just let it hang out in the smoke and get happy for 30 minutes or so. Do not put your meat on the grill grates yet. They conduct heat really well and will cook your meat before it gets to pick up any flavor from the smoke.
This is referred to as “smoking”; the temperature is around 225 degrees. 30 minutes of smoking is not enough to have any cooking effect on your meat. But, it is enough to open the pores so that the meat can pick up all the flavor of the smoke
After 30 minutes, turn the digital control up to High 425/450 degrees and pull the meat off the grill. When the grill comes up to temperature place your burgers on the Grill Grate for 5 minutes a side. If you want a nice looking grill char about half way through each side give the burger a quarter turn. Just beautiful!

The Royall 3000 with the Grill Grate
Note: I get a lot of questions about the kind of pellets you can use with a recipe. Keep in mind that a recipe is just an outline. Some you need follow closely like when you are making bread, but most you can do anything you can dream, our favorite way to cook. Feel free to mix and match the pellets until you find a combination you really like. Also, you are only smoking at temps less than 250 degrees, anything higher is cooking and there will not be much if any smoke so it does not matter what kind of pellet you are using.
Directions: Gas Grill
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes smoke, 10 minutes cook
Grill: indirect Low & High Heat
Preparing Grill: Low Indirect Heat
30 minutes with your wet wood chips for smoking
Preheat your grill to low heat (180 - 225) and turn off one side so you will be cooking with indirect heat. Add your wet hickory chips over the fire and oil the grill. A cooking spray is easiest for this. (Note: you can add your hickory directly to the grill or you can use foil smoke packets.(Two handfuls wet chips and one dry, fold foil into a packet, poke holes in it with a fork and you’re good to go.)
Preparing Grill: High Indirect Heat
Preheat your grill to High heat (400-500) and turn off one side so you will be cooking with indirect heat. Add your wet hickory chips to the fire and oil the grill. A cooking spray is easiest for this. (Note: you can add your hickory directly to the grill or you can use foil smoke packets.(Two handfuls wet chips and one dry, fold foil into a packet, poke holes in it with a fork and you’re good to go.)
Preparing Charcoal Grill
Get the Grill ready, you will want your temperature of around 400-500 degrees. Remember, you are going high heat here for about 14 minutes. Bank your coals over to one side of your grill. Add your “drained wood chips” and you are good to go… Your cooking times and temps will be the same as above.
Cooking In the Oven:
We have been getting requests for recipe conversions for the oven. I tell folks all the time that cooking on a Royall Wood Pellet Grill/Smoker is just as easy as cooking in your oven. Just about anyone can do it and do it well. Think about it. You set your control knob to the temp you want, put your meat in and leave it for a set time.
It is the same thing, time and temperature is what it is all about. The Royall is just like your oven except it uses wood pellets and has wheels.
If you want to smoke in your oven they sell oven smokers for that. I, myself, would not spend the money on one of those when you can make your own out of foil. Foil smoke packets. (Two handfuls wet chips and one dry, fold foil into a packet, poke holes in it with a fork and you’re good to go.) Just set it in the oven. You might want to make sure you turn on your vent fan or your house will fill up with smoke. You will give your alarms a good work out.

Looking Amazing, Let’s Eat
About our Recipes
We do our recipes on our patio where we have a lineup of grills, including Royall Wood Pellet Grill/Smoker, Traeger, Char Griller side box smoker, Charmglow, Char-Broil, The Big Easy, Brinkman and Weber. I call it our “Wall of Grill”. Our grilling styles are healthy and low fat and will fit pellet heads, gas, natural wood and even charcoal purists. Almost any of our recipes can be done on any kind of good BBQ.
The important thing to keep in mind is TIME & TEMPERATURE. You can even do some of them in the oven or crock pot, but, then you lose all the flavors you get from cooking outdoors. But sometimes it does rain.

Another Well “Stufz” Burger
Remember that a recipe is simply an outline; it is not written in stone. Don’t be afraid to make changes to suit your taste.
Take it and run with it….
Live your Passion,
Ken & Patti

















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