The burger: Fulton Brewing, home of one of the city's first taprooms, has recently added a kitchen. A somewhat unconventional one, as it's housed in a retrofitted 1968 Airstream trailer that pretty much defines "cool." It's parked outside the North Loop brewery, and its under the direction of executive chef Scott Pampuch, the local foods poobah and force behind the original incarnation of Corner Table.
The burger's particulars change on a daily basis, but its architecture remains constant.
"We don't do the diner burger," said Pampuch, referring to the smashed, thin-pattied model. Instead, he's favoring what he calls the "back yard grill" burger, with a thick-ish, tender, loosely formed patty. "This is a taproom," he said. "If I'm having a beer, I want to be reminded of sitting outside, by the grill, with a beer in my hand."
With the weather making its inevitable pivot to winter, Pampuch has recently boosted his menu with heartier fare.
"Everyone says, 'You're trying to pair food with beer,'" he said. "But I'm just trying to make food that you want to eat with beer."
That includes a sort-of burger in the form of a patty melt, one that places a Hall of Fame-level Minneapolis dish at its center: the meatloaf from the late and highly lamented Modern Cafe, one of several significant kitchens on Pampuch's resume. This is no half-hearted culinary copycat; Pampuch insists that it's the real thing.
"I made that meatloaf for so long that I don't know that I could make another one," he said with a laugh.
He's certainly using top-flight ingredients. The beef hails from Peterson Craftsman Meats and it's enriched with the Airstream kitchen's excellent porchetta, which is ground and blended into the ground beef in a 1-to-4 ratio.