
Bubba Breakfast Burger

By Emma
Certified Culinary Professional
Ingredients
- 2 frozen Bubba burgers (can swap ground chicken patty or plant-based alternative)
- 4 slices white cheddar cheese (anything melt-y like Monterey Jack works)
- 2 handfuls fresh arugula (peppery, swap with baby spinach if needed)
- 4 slices thick-cut bacon (pancetta or smoked ham possible subs)
- 2 eggs
- Salt and pepper to taste
- 2 burger buns (toasted if desired)
In The Same Category · Breakfast
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Method
- Heat grill or skillet to medium indirect heat, around 340-360°F. Skillet should sizzle but not scream.
- Drop frozen burgers on grill/skillet. No jabbing, no moving around. Wait for juices to bubble up at surface. Usually 3-7 mins but watch carefully.
- Look for good brown crust forming, not drying out. That char? Flavor gold. Patience here pays off.
- Flip gently once juice pooling appears across top. Cook second side 3-7 mins depending on thickness and doneness vibe.
- Remove patty, let rest on a plate. Resting seals juices, avoid a dry hockey puck burger.
- Same skillet, throw bacon in. Crisp it. Render fat for egg fry later.
- Swipe fat around skillet if needed. Fry eggs sunny side up. Lid the pan or cover lightly with foil. Watch whites firm but yolk wobble like jelly.
- Toast buns in bacon fat if you want extra depth.
- Stack bottom bun with 2 slices white cheddar, pile arugula then burger, bacon strips, and top with egg. Salt and pepper zest now, essential.
- Eat open-faced or slap on top bun. Juicy textures defy fork and knife.
- If burger underdone, a quick return to pan or indirect grill heat seals deal. Broke yolk? Scramble egg quickly on side and slap on anyway. No disaster.
Cooking tips
Chef's notes
- 💡 Frozen patties need no stabbing or pressing. Heat medium indirect, listen for sizzle not scream. Juices bubble up slow 3-7 mins; watch carefully. That crust forms flavor, patience wins. Flip once juices pool over top. Rest patty after cooking; juices settle, avoid dry puck. Don’t rush.
- 💡 Bacon thick-cut, crisp in same skillet. Render fat fully first or egg sticks. Swipe fat well before eggs. Lid egg pan lightly; steam cooks whites gentle edge firm, yolk wobble signals done. Avoid full flip. Broken yolk? Scramble on side quick. Use bacon grease for buns toast or butter/oil if no grease.
- 💡 Arugula sharp bite wakes burger, swap baby spinach or watercress if pepper harsh. White cheddar melts best but Monterey Jack or sharp cheddar work too. Cheese slices thin enough to melt through patty warmth, stack early when burger rests. Season salt and pepper post assembly; final flavor boost.
- 💡 Watch burger look and feel, not clock. Juices form beads then pool top; crust browns dark edges but not burnt. If undercooked, low indirect heat return quick fix. Skillet heat should be forgiving; jump pan off high heat or adjust burner. Patty thickness matters; thicker takes longer, thinner faster but same juice cues.
- 💡 Toast buns in bacon fat for texture, skip if picky. Open face or close bun; juice runs if closed, good mess. Egg lids boil whites, no flip means less broken yolks. Fresh eggs better but older work with tighter lid watch. Sub chicken patty for lighter day; cook quicker, watch juices even more. Plant-based same rules.
Common questions
Can I use thawed patties?
Yes but cooking time changes. Quicker juice appearance, less risk dryness. Pat rest still vital. Thawed sometimes stick more; add fat or oil layer. Watch crust.
What if bacon fat not enough?
Butter plus oil mix fine. Avoid burning pan fat. Vegetable oil good. Add fat before eggs. Limited grease? Use non-stick pan option but less flavor. Cooking sprays last resort.
How do I know egg is done without flipping?
Lid method key. Whites firm edges, shiny yolk but jiggle still. Too much steam equals runny whites. Too little lid, whites get tough. Watch carefully; wobble signals cook point. Scramble quick if broken yolk early.
Can leftovers store and reheat?
Wrap cool burger tight. Fridge 2 days max. Reheat skillet low heat or oven 300°F wrapped in foil. Egg texture changes; fresh fry better. Toast buns separately before reheating burger patty. Avoid microwave for soggy bun.








































