A Guide to Cooking Thai-Style Beef Burgers: A Fresh Twist on a Summer Classic
BBQ season is here! So excited to cook in the garden on those sunny days and entertain during the warm evenings. There's nothing better than BBQ food like skewers, sausages or wings, and cooking homemade burgers is just the cherry on top! These Thai-style beef burgers are juicy and packed with fresh flavours of coriander and lemongrass. They're so delicious served on a toasted bun with sweet chilli sauce and garnished with sweet Thai basil, lettuce and tomato.
If you've ever found yourself stuck in a burger rut, same beef patty, same cheese, same ketchup-and-mustard combo, this recipe is the perfect way to shake things up. By bringing the bright, aromatic profile of Thai cuisine into a beloved Western format, you get the best of both worlds: the satisfying char and juiciness of a grilled burger with the herbal, slightly spicy lift that Thai cooking is so well known for. It's the kind of dish that turns a casual cookout into something memorable, without requiring a single ingredient you can't find at a regular supermarket.
What Makes Thai-Style Beef Burgers Special?
What sets these burgers apart from a standard beef patty isn't just the ingredient list, it's the way each flavour layer is designed to complement the others. Traditional Western burgers tend to rely on richness: fatty beef, melted cheese, creamy sauces. Thai cooking, on the other hand, is built around balance, the interplay of salty, sweet, sour and spicy that defines almost every classic Thai dish.
When you fold a spoonful of Thai green curry paste into minced beef, you're essentially seasoning the patty from the inside out. Lemongrass adds a citrusy lift, galangal brings a peppery warmth that's similar to ginger but much more aromatic, and kaffir lime leaves cut through the richness of the beef with a floral, fragrant brightness. The chopped fresh coriander stirred through the mince keeps things grassy and green, while the egg binds everything together so the patty holds its shape on the grill.
The result is a burger that tastes lighter than it looks. The fat in the beef carries the curry paste's flavour deep into the patty, so every bite is seasoned all the way through, not just on the surface. It's the kind of burger that makes guests pause after the first bite and ask what's in it.
Origins
The classic hamburger as we know it has firmly American roots, popularised in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, but the idea of seasoned minced meat shaped into a patty is much older and far more global. From Middle Eastern kofta to Southeast Asian larb-style meat dishes, cultures around the world have been mixing fresh herbs and aromatics into ground meat for centuries.
Thai cuisine itself has a long tradition of working with minced beef and pork. Dishes like larb, a fragrant minced meat salad tossed with toasted rice powder, lime juice, fish sauce, mint and coriander, show just how naturally herbs and chilli pair with ground meat. Likewise, Thai-style meatballs and grilled beef skewers (neua yang) often use lemongrass, garlic, coriander root and curry paste as a flavour base. The Thai pantry, with its emphasis on fresh herbs and pungent pastes, has always been well suited to seasoning meat from within rather than just on the surface.
The Thai-style beef burger sits at the intersection of these two traditions. It's part of a broader wave of fusion cooking that took off in the 1990s and 2000s, as Thai restaurants spread across the UK, US and Australia, and home cooks began experimenting with Asian flavours in familiar formats. Pad Thai tacos, sticky rice arancini, tom yum risotto, Thai-fusion has become its own delicious sub-genre, and the Thai beef burger is one of its most accessible expressions. You get the comforting familiarity of a burger with the unmistakable, herbaceous punch of Thai cooking, all in one bite.
What Type of Minced Beef Is Best for Burgers?
For homemade beef burgers, using minced beef with a higher fat content is great for making burgers. The high concentration of fat (around 20%) will bind the meat better, and you won't need to add oil when cooking, whether that's pan-frying, grilling or barbecuing. As the heat melts the fat away, it crisps up the outside of the burger and melts through the middle to give flavour and keep it tender.
While a high-fat content is best for cooking burgers over a hot grill, you can still make burgers with leaner mince. Lean meat between 12% and 15% fat is a good all-rounder, it still has enough fat that it won't dry out, but feels a little less heavy. If you're looking to keep all your summer cooking as low-calorie as possible, then extra-lean beef (5%–10% fat) is an option. Just be wary when cooking, as this mince will dry out the quickest. Make sure you don't overcook the burger to avoid it going tough.
A small tip if you're using leaner mince: be extra gentle when mixing and shaping the patties. Overworking the meat compresses the proteins and squeezes out moisture, which is the main reason homemade burgers can end up dense or dry. Mix just until the ingredients are evenly combined and shape with a light hand.
What you’ll need for this recipe
Minced beef — Fat content matters here. For the grill or BBQ, a 20% fat mince is ideal. The fat renders during cooking, keeping the patty moist and adding richness that balances the paste's heat. For a weeknight dinner rather than a BBQ, a leaner mince works too, just watch the cooking time.
Mae Jum Thai Green Curry Paste — The heart of this recipe. Made from authentic Thai ingredients, fresh green chillies, lemongrass, galangal, kaffir lime leaves, garlic, and shallots, stone-ground in Thailand using Jum's family recipe. A quality paste makes a noticeable difference here, and every ingredient earns its place in the patty.
Fresh coriander — Brings a fresh, citrusy note that lifts the richness of the beef. If you're not a fan, flat-leaf parsley makes a milder substitute, though the flavour profile will shift.
Egg — One egg per 500g of mince acts as a binder. The curry paste adds moisture to the mixture, so the egg is what keeps the patty together on the grill.
Onion — Finely diced. It should be small enough to soften completely during cooking, no unpleasant crunch in the finished burger.
Sweet Thai basil — A garnish that earns its place. Peppery, slightly anise-like, and more robust than regular basil. Find it at most Asian supermarkets. Once you've tried it here, you'll want it every time.
Sweet chilli sauce — A drizzle in the assembled burger ties everything together. Gentle heat, gentle sweetness, and the perfect counterpoint to the savoury, spiced patty.
Cooking Tips for the Perfect Thai Beef Burger
Chill the patties before cooking. Once shaped, refrigerate for at least 15 minutes. This firms up the mixture and makes the burgers far less likely to crack on the grill. Cold patties hold their shape better against high heat.
Don't overwork the mixture. Mix until just combined, use your hands, work quickly, and stop the moment everything is evenly incorporated.
Get the grill properly hot first. High, even heat is what gives you a caramelised, slightly charred exterior. A grill that isn't hot enough will steam the patties rather than sear them, and you'll lose the crust that makes this worth making.
Flip once. Place the patties on the grill and leave them alone. Flip halfway through and leave them alone again. One flip per side gives each surface the time it needs to develop colour and flavour without drying out.
Toast the buns. Thirty seconds cut-side down on the grill adds texture and stops the bread going soggy.
Rest briefly before serving. A minute or two off the heat lets the juices redistribute. Every bite stays as flavourful as the first.
Make it at home
The Thai Green Curry Paste used in this recipe is Mae Jum's stone-ground green curry, Jum's family recipe, made with natural ingredients from Thailand, no added oil or preservatives. One 70g pack makes 6–8 restaurant-quality servings. At around 50–67p per serving, it's one of the most efficient flavour upgrades in the kitchen.
What to serve alongside
These burgers are strong enough to anchor a summer BBQ spread. A som tum, green papaya salad with lime, fish sauce, and chilli, brings a sharp, refreshing contrast to the richness of the patty. Nam tok neua, a Thai beef salad dressed with toasted rice powder and fresh herbs, turns the whole meal into a genuine celebration of Thai beef cookery.
For drinks: cold Thai iced tea, a clean lager, or sparkling lemonade with fresh mint.
Final Thoughts
Thai beef burgers are proof that one well-made ingredient can change a dish entirely. The lemongrass holds through the heat, the galangal adds a depth you can't quite place but would immediately miss, and the kaffir lime leaves leave just enough brightness to keep the richness of the beef in check. The finished patty tastes like something that took considerably more effort than it actually did, which is the point.
A properly made paste brings years of knowledge and the right ingredients to a recipe in under a minute. Adjust the paste to your heat preference, experiment with the garnishes, and use the best mince you can find. The rest follows naturally.
If you enjoyed our traditional Thai Green curry recipe, please give this recipe a star rating and comment if you loved the flavours of this authentic dish! Check out our recipe page for more delicious dishes like this and subscribe for new recipes and posts. Always stay connected and follow us on Instagram and Facebook!
