The Best Burger Loaded with Umami
Our ugly, but incredibly savory, delicious and popular umami loaded burger recipe (umami hamburger) now has an update. This time, it became the ultimate umami loaded cheeseburger, which is updated in the recipe. This recipe has been in our family since the early 1980’s and recipe originally published in 2009.

Family Umami Burger Recipe
For the longest time, we’ve been making the best darn umami hamburger recipe on the face of this earth (insert personal bias.) We’ve never had a specific name for our homemade umami loaded burger recipe until someone tagged it as the “magic meat”, but not as in “mystery meat” or “I can’t tell if this is chicken or beef.” Rather, it was to describe the magical flavor sensations that everyone experienced when they bit into one of our patties. That “magic meat” term described the juicy, flavorful and savory burger patty that everyone fought over. Sometimes the buns were tossed to the side or forgotten because the meat was just so delicious and satisfying.
Watch the video making these Ultimate Umami Hamburgers:
It wasn’t until recently, with all the discussion on Umami (the rich, savory taste in foods) that our umami hamburger recipe was re-named as the hamburger loaded with umami. Our hungry friends were always stumped to figure out the secret ingredient and could never, ever pinpoint that “magic” flavor that made our patties so unique.
It’s the ultimate burger that is so satisfying and savory, no one can eat just one. Make it a double, please. But this umami rich burger recipe isn’t a new invention, nor is it a trendy recipe to keep up with the popularity of umami rich foods. No burger chain should ever make claim or ownership to this savory burger. Many families have been making this for decades before any trendy burger joint capitalized on the idea. This recipe is a family recipe that started from my Vietnamese-American family back in the early 80’s, in a 2-bedroom apartment, in the middle of Southern California…

our ultimate umami loaded burgers are the highlights of our outdoor gatherings
About Our Umami Hamburgers
Diane –
That Vietnamese family is obviously mine. Growing up in a Vietnamese family of 6 kids who were always hungry and thirsty for more American foods, my parents had to figure out a way to feed their hungry pack of kids. Back then, hamburgers were the “American’s food”, “that sandwich with that big piece of meat in it, with the red and yellow sauces and the sour cucumber slices.” My siblings and I wanted to eat “Ham-buh-guh” all day long and we wanted it NOW.
My parents figured out that it was much more economical to make burgers at home and did exactly that by creating their own recipe for the patties. Of course, being Vietnamese, they marinated the beef in the only way they knew how—splash fish sauce to it. Fish sauce is the golden elixir to us Vietnamese, take it away and you drain the blood out of our cuisine. Fish sauce is the fermented salvation from the food spirits and food fairies. It’s pure umami brings out the savory depth in all foods.
With their batch of ground beef, my parents’ splashed fish sauce as the one and only marinade into the burger recipe. With the addition of a little sugar for balance, garlic for more aromatic love and black pepper for bite, their simple recipe has evolved into what our friends call today as “The Ultimate Umami Burger.”
This recipe isn’t unique by any means, especially in a Vietnamese household. I’m certain there are many Vietnamese-American families who splashed their burger meat with fish sauce!
Todd –
I know what a lot of you non-Asian people are thinking, “Fish sauce? Um, hell no.” But wait, my dear skeptics, and listen to my confessional. For many years when I first fell in love with Diane, I avoided fish sauce. Let’s face it, it stinks like something most of us are not used to. It is, after all, fermented anchovies. Mmmm, tasty! Not. At least so I thought, but man, was I ever wrong.
One fine meal while dining on a grilled shrimp ball, I dipped it into the Vietnamese classic Nuoc Cham (Viet Fish Sauce Dip) and I suddenly saw the umami. There was no weird fishiness, instead the fish sauce’s own flavor virtually disappeared and many of the other flavors within the grilled shrimp ball became heightened. Everything was good before, but after the addition of fish sauce everything was incredible. I was instantly converted.
Ever since I’ve never hesitated to grab the bottle of fish sauce. It was my brother-in-law, a classic mid-west guy, who dubbed the fish sauce laden ground beef as the “Magic Meat.” It was that damn tasty. And now we have another believer in the umami.
Sure everything will be tasty without the umami adding fish sauce. However, it will be even better with the magic sauce.
Credit to Mom and Dad
Oh btw- our forever family burger recipe was not inspired by any copycat burger chains bearing a similar name. This is definitely not an endorsement for anyone’s burger other than this one that Mom and Dad have been making for decades. Our umami hamburger is way more simple, clean, un-fussy, unpretentious and way more delicious because the ultimate umami comes from the fish sauce that we’ve been using for decades.
This recipe was originally published in 2009 and republished in 2015 with updated video.
Our Favorite Fish Sauce Brands:
This has been our house fish sauce for decades. Great stuff! We’ll use it to make our dipping sauces as well as marinades.
100% all-natural first press extra virgin Vietnamese fish sauce. One of the best artisan fish sauce producers.
Another good fish sauce. Clean flavors, good depth. It’s the one Diane’s mom most often uses for cooking.
The Umami Loaded Burger Recipe
Ingredients
- 2 lbs. (907 g) Ground Beef
- 1 1/2 Tablespoons (22.5 ml) Fish Sauce (for more daring, savory depth, use 2 tablespoons)
- 2 cloves Garlic , crushed or minced
- 1 teaspoon (5 ml) Sugar
- 1/2 teaspoon (2.5 ml) fresh ground Black Pepper , or to taste
- Flaky Salt , optional
- 6 Hamburger buns (or 8-12 slider buns)
- condiments of your choice and cheese makes it extra decadent and special
Instructions
- In a bowl, combine beef, fish sauce, garlic, sugar, and black pepper. Mixed together well. If you have time, fridge the beef for 30 minutes or more. We like to allow the beef to marinade overnight in the fridge for optimum flavor, but most of the time don't plan that far ahead. They still always come out great, even with a shorter marinade time.

- Gently form meat into patties for sliders or burgers. Form them roughly wider than the size of your burger or slider buns. Try not to compress the meat too much or else the burgers will cook more dense and won't be quite as delicious.

- If you like your burgers super-seasoned, sprinkle a bit of flaky salt and additional black pepper on the formed patties before cooking.

- For grilling: pre-heat the grill over medium-high heat (if you have that option) and scrape the grill grates clean before grilling. It will help minimize the sticking. For pan cooking: preheat your skillet over medium-high heat.

- Cook on grill or skillet about 3 minutes per side or until cooked to your liking. (1/2 pound patties on a med./high grill take about 3 min. per side for med. rare burger. Heat temp., thickness, etc. all affect cooking times).

- Assemble your burger with your favorite condiments and treat yourself to the cheeseburger version!

Video
Nutrition Information per Serving
Rule the Game of Grilling
Stop guessing when the meat is cooked. Every grill cooks a little different, so timing will vary, but temperature rules the game.















These look awesome. Has anyone tried these burgers with Hawaiian rolls? I want to make sliders but I need to make a good bun decision.
Hi Colleen,
Hawaiian rolls are our favorite way to make these into sliders. People freak out over how tasty they are.
Finally! A use for fish sauce!
I just happened across this via google search and made them yesterday for a company BBQ – huge hit and many “best hamburger I’ve ever had comments”. I made them as sliders on the Costco slightly sweet dinner rolls topped with half a slice of Colby Jack.
Thanks!
Aha! Its amazing how skeptical our western minds are when faced with something like this, only to be completely overridden by the flavour overload that the fish sauce adds.
I’ve yet to make these burgers but I know the fish sauce will be the killer ingrediant – I’ve started adding it to gound beef when browning for chilli, bolognese etc etc.
A similar idea and one which might appeal: When making steaks, coat them in a paste mixture of ground anchovies, garlic, thyme, rosemary and olive oil and fry to your liking. Just like the burgers, the depth from the ground anchovies is fantastic, but with no “fishy” taste.
Superb, I will make your burgers tonight!
Stevie,
Scotland
I make these exclusively all the time now. I’ve modified it little – I’ve 1/2 the fish sauce and replace it with soy sauce and also add garlic and onion powder. Lastly, some steak spice on the outside and they are perfect. Really, really good. Thank you.
Reminds me of what I do with burgers. Only I use oyster sauce in them and just black pepper. Provides a similar umami experience.
I am very much looking forward to your home made fish sauce recipe. I live near a good source of small fresh fish that are easy to catch.
I am absolutely going to make your recipe today. I will be using venison so I am hoping that it will “help” me like the burger more. I cook with a lot of venison because that is what we always have in our freezer (yeah Grumpy the hunter) but I personally am not crazy about the taste and like to try to find ways to kill the “wildness” that I don’t like about it. Grumpy’s daddy is here today to so I am anxious to see what they will think of these burgers! Of course, I’m not going to tell them and I am hoping they call this Magic Meat too! :o)
Just discovered this fantastic blog! It makes up for my Gourmet subscription that the publisher cancelled.
I love fish sauce but didn’t think of putting it in burgers.
But I have been using anchovy paste as a stealth ingredient in all sorts of other dishes, so now I know I’m on the right track.
Yes, I’ve been using fish sauce instead of salt for years. It adds a certain depth to my dishes that plain cooking salt can’t equal.
I read this awhile ago and thought “hmm…interesting”. I was making burgers a couple of weeks ago and remembered the fish sauce after I’d already made the patties, and went back and forth re: should I toss all the meat back after making these perfectly sized and shaped patties, and add the fish sauce or not? I am SO glad I opted to do so! I wasn’t sure how much to put in so I just winged it. Didn’t share with dh what I’d done but while he was eating his burger, he said “wow, this meat is REALLY good, isn’t it?”! I eventually told him what I’d added and now this is the way I’ll prepare burgers all the time. Definitely fantastic and makes all the difference in the world! Thank you!
Seanna- wonderful! Glad you had a last minute (literally) change of plans and tossed the meat back! Fish sauce definitely makes all the difference in the world.
I’m looking at a bottle of Lea & Perrins Worchestershire sayce, a very common burger sesasoning in the USA and the UK.
The ingredients are: vinegar, sugar, salt, ANCHOVIES, tamarind, etc.
I can’t WAIT to try fish sauce on my next burger!
this looks lovely. what a great post. i’m happy that i stumbled across your blog and look forward to monitoring it going forward. and i gotta say a bit about fish sauce… it has been my personal “secret ingredient” for some time. i have some dear friends that are filipinos and they introduced me to this wonderful condiment, and ever since i basically use it instead of worcestershire sauce. i think it has more depth and bite and richness of flavor. a big fan… i also now used many other traditionally asian condiments in my “western” recipes with great success. looking forward to reading more of you “fusion” cooking techniques…
I have done the same process with Turkey burgers and it was fantastic. I was looking for something to boost the turkey flavor and had decided a umami punch was the answer. I went back and forth between soy and fish sauce, but decided on Fish sauce due to the mild nature of the turkey. I haven’t tried the soy yet, but I will try it in the ground beef.
Scott – oooh, turkey burgers marinated in fish sauce, sounds like a winner!
Wow, I’ve actually been looking into making my own burgers for a while, this looks fantastic! I’ll have to try it out!
My husband and I LOVE fish sauce! I laughed when I saw “magic meat” because we make a “magic sauce”. It’s made with equal parts fish sauce and chopped thai bird chilis. It marinates in the fridge and we add it to practically everything. When it runs low, we just add more of the ingredients. It ROCKS! We’ve added to salmon burgers, but have not thought to make hamburgers with it. We will now!
BTW – I grew up in North Eastern Oregon (Baker) and now live in the Bay Area with my Japanese husband.