Neatly packed in its plastic foam box, Shady Lane's Brownsboro burger and onion rings arrive home safe and sound.

Some days you feel like a burger. Some days you feel like a steak. But let’s make one thing perfectly clear: This is not a matter of better and best. The simple, honest burger in no way takes second place to the faux nobility of the tenderloin, rib eye, strip, or porterhouse. Sometimes, when you’re in a certain mood, nothing but a burger will do.
Feeling like a burger and having a burger on your plate can be two different things, though. Do you get out and buy dinner, or do you make your own? There’s a lot to be said for making your own: You save costs, and you control the ingredients, the preparation, the heat, the toppings, even the decision whether to add a slice or two of cheese.
But how do you make your burger as good as it can be? To find out, we asked for advice from a half-dozen local burger experts, restaurant chefs who’ve earned the people's ovation and fame forever for the quality of their grilled ground-beef patties. This city has so many great burger joints, not to mention high-end eateries that make great burgers, that it wasn’t easy to narrow the pool down to six, so I went for a random cross-section. Apologies if I missed your favorite.
I invited each chef to respond to two simple questions:
* What are your secrets about making great burgers for your customers?
* What do you advise people who want to make great burgers at home?
Here, only lightly edited, is just about everything that the chefs at Six Forks Burger Co., The Fat Lamb, Grind Burger Kitchen, Burger Boy, 80/20@Kaelin's, and Shady Lane Cafe told us. ...
Read the complete article on LouisvilleHotBytes,
http://www.louisvillehotbytes.com/secrets-burger-chefs
Read it in LEO Weekly's Dining Issue today:
https://www.leoweekly.com/2020/06/burgers/