Aussie Burger with Beetroot

Aussie Burger with Beetroot

The Aussie burger, sometimes called "the lot", is a milk-bar institution that emerged in Australia in the mid-twentieth century when European immigrants and returning soldiers reshaped the corner takeaway. What distinguishes it from any American or British burger is the insistence on tinned pickled beetroot, a slice of canned pineapple, a fried egg and rashers of streaky bacon, all stacked under a thick beef patty on a toasted bun. The beetroot is non-negotiable: it stains the bread, it stains your fingers, it leaks down your wrist, and it is the entire point. The combination sounds chaotic but works because each layer plays a clear role: sweet pineapple against salty bacon, earthy beetroot against rich egg yolk, sharp tomato chutney cutting through melted cheese. The patty itself is generously sized, hand-shaped, and seasoned simply so the toppings can do the talking. Difficulty is low; the only real skill is timing several pans at once so the egg, bacon and patty all arrive hot together. This is not delicate food. It is built to be eaten leaning forward over a paper wrapper with napkins and a cold drink. Serve it at a backyard barbecue and watch grown adults negotiate the architecture of the bite.

Australian 40 minutes Serves4
Beef Chili

Beef Chili

The American household chili, sitting somewhere between Texas-style "no beans" purism and Cincinnati-style "chili over spaghetti" eccentricity, this one has beans, isn't sweetened with cinnamon, and lands solidly in the middle of the bell curve. The flavour is a Tex-Mex spice rack working in concert: chili powder (the broad warmth), cumin (the earthy backbone), smoked paprika (the deep smoke), chipotle powder (the slow-burn heat), brown sugar (a quiet balance), garlic powder (the savoury underline). Fire-roasted tomatoes are the technical detail that lifts this above a generic chili, charring the tomatoes before canning adds a roasted note that ordinary diced tomatoes can't supply. Texture is chunky and brothy rather than thick-and-pasty (this isn't a chili-mac chili), with kidney beans giving substance and pieces of bell pepper still holding their bite. Smell is cumin and smoked paprika on browned beef. Genuinely easy and incredibly forgiving, chili is one of the few dishes that's better the day after it's made, so it tolerates a longer simmer if you have it. American cold-weather bowl food, eaten across every state from Texas to New York, with regional toppings (sour cream, cheese, raw onion, cornbread, oyster crackers) that say more about the cook than the dish.

American 45 minutes Serves8-10
Beef Si Byan

Beef Si Byan

A Burmese curry from the country's Indian-origin community, sitting somewhere between a Madras and a Burmese ohn-no in spice profile. You marinate chunks of beef chuck or shin in turmeric, fish sauce and salt while you fry onions in oil until they're deep brown - that long onion fry is the foundation. The beef browns in the same oil, then ginger-garlic paste, paprika and chilli powder go in, then tomato and water turn it into a stew. Two hours of slow simmer until the meat falls apart at a fork. The signature finish is the see byan, a deep red-orange oil slick that rises to the top of the curry as it reduces, which is what the dish is named for. Eaten with rice or paratha, and a small bowl of pickled vegetable on the side.

Burmese 3 hours 20 minutes Serves4
Birria

Birria

Birria is a Mexican braise of long, patient ambition. Originally a goat or lamb dish from Jalisco, it has long since adopted beef in much of Mexico and almost entirely in the popular taco version. The flavour comes from a layered chile base: guajillo for fruit and colour, ancho for raisin sweetness, pasilla for earthy depth, and a handful of arbol for a sharper heat. These are simmered with onion, garlic, cinnamon and peppercorns, blended smooth with chipotles in adobo and fire-roasted tomato, then poured over seared chuck and short rib for a long oven braise. Three hours later the meat is meltingly tender, sitting in a rust-red consomme that is the whole point: ladled over the shredded beef in a bowl, scattered with raw onion, cilantro and lime, or used to dip crisp taco shells for the now-iconic quesabirria. The recipe takes time but very little technique; almost everything happens unattended in the oven. Plan ahead and make it a day in advance so the flavours settle and the fat lifts cleanly off the top before you reheat.

Mexican 4 hours Serves8
Boerewors

Boerewors

Boerewors, literally "farmer's sausage" in Afrikaans, is the national sausage of South Africa and the obligatory centrepiece of any braai. South African law actually defines it: minimum 90 per cent meat (beef the dominant component, often with pork or lamb for fat), no more than 30 per cent fat overall, no offal, and a defined spice profile led by toasted ground coriander. That coriander is the signature; combined with clove, nutmeg, allspice and black pepper, and brought together with a splash of malt or brown vinegar, it produces a flavour quite unlike any European sausage. The sausage is always coiled rather than linked, and grilled in a single long spiral that can be turned in one piece with a pair of long forks. Difficulty for the home cook is very low if you can buy ready-made boerewors from a South African butcher, deli or online supplier, which is the practical route for most. Making it from scratch needs a meat grinder and sausage stuffer but the spicing is straightforward. Cooking is the part everyone gets wrong: boerewors is a coarse-ground sausage with chunks of fat in the meat, and it cooks at medium heat, never high. Too hot and the casing splits, fat renders out and the sausage shrivels; just right and it stays plump, juicy, with a deep mahogany crust. The classic accompaniments are pap (a stiff white maize porridge), tomato-and-onion relish (sous), or stuffed into a fresh bread roll with tomato chutney and crispy fried onions as a boerie roll.

South African 35 minutes Serves6
Bruschetta al Pomodoro

Bruschetta al Pomodoro

Cubed ripe tomatoes sit with salt, olive oil, basil and a touch of red wine vinegar for 30 minutes to release juice and meld. Country-style bread is sliced 2 cm thick and toasted hard on a grill, in a pan, or under a high broiler until both sides are deeply golden with charred edges. While still warm, each slice is rubbed with a raw garlic clove (the rough bread surface acts as a grater, embedding garlic essence into every fibre) and drizzled with extra-virgin olive oil. The macerated tomato mixture is spooned onto each slice; eaten within 60 seconds before the bread goes soft.

Snacks 50 minutes Serves4
Chapli Kebab

Chapli Kebab

Chapli kebabs are the spiced beef patties sizzling on a wide flat tawa at any roadside grill from Peshawar to Kabul, big enough to wrap a hand around and seasoned with the unusual punch of dried pomegranate seeds and coriander. The mince mixes with grated onion, chopped fresh tomato, ginger, garlic, beaten egg and a little gram flour to bind, plus the signature Afghan spice blend (coriander seed, pomegranate seeds, chilli flakes, cumin and garam masala). A thirty-minute rest lets the gram flour absorb the moisture and the spices marry. Pat thin and wide (the word chapli means "flat" or "slipper-shaped"), then fry hard in oil three or four minutes a side until darkly crusted. Eat hot from the pan, wrapped in fresh naan with sliced raw onion and a green chutney.

Afghanistan 1 hour 10 minutes Serves4
Chili Cheese Dip

Chili Cheese Dip

Ground beef browns in a wide oven-safe skillet with onion and garlic. Spices (chilli powder, cumin, oregano, smoked paprika) bloom in the fat. Tomato passata, kidney beans, a splash of stock, salt and pepper simmer for 20 minutes to thicken. Surface scatters with a thick layer of grated cheese (cheddar + Monterey Jack). Goes under a hot grill for 4-5 minutes till bubbling and crisped at the edges. Tops with sliced spring onion, jalapeños, soured cream. Eats hot with tortilla chips.

Snacks 45 minutes Serves6-8
Ema Datshi

Ema Datshi

Bhutan's national dish, built on an honest two-ingredient premise: chillies and cheese, in roughly equal volume. The flavour is two things held in tension. The fierce burn of green chillies (jalapeños standing in for the hotter, more floral local Bhutanese varieties) on one side, the funky salty richness of blue cheese (Stilton or Gorgonzola standing in for the traditional yak cheese) on the other. The dairy fat tempers the burn just enough that you can actually eat it, but only just. The burn is the point. You build the dish out with beef, potato and tomato into a proper stew, and everything goes into the pot together to simmer until the cheese melts down into a fierce, creamy, chilli-flecked sauce. Eaten with red Bhutanese rice at most meals in Bhutan. Halve the chilli count the first time you cook it; the locals will laugh, but you'll be able to taste your next meal.

Bhutanese 50 minutes Serves6
Go Bo Hoi an

Go Bo Hoi an

Go Bo Hoi An is a piquant Vietnamese beef salad featuring thinly sliced seared beef tossed with crisp vegetables, fresh herbs, and a bright tamarind-lime dressing. This dish has delicate undertones of lime and garlic which carry through the tamarind flavours perfectly. The combination of tender beef, crunchy vegetables, aromatic herbs, and crispy rice papers creates a textural and flavourful celebration of Vietnamese cuisine. Quick to make but requires advance preparation, ensure the salad, dressing, and toppings are made and ready to use before cooking the beef.

Vietnamese 25 minutes Serves2
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