LOS ANGELES — “It’s so secret. So many secret things in there. I’ll never tell you.”
This is Jazz Singsanong’s standard response when people ask what she puts in the off-menu Jazz burger at her Thai restaurant, Jitlada. The spicy patty served on leaves of crisp iceberg lettuce in lieu of a bun is sort of like the protein- or animal-style burger at In-N-Out: It’s technically secret, but if you know about it, you order it.
Most of us have the late Times restaurant critic Jonathan Gold to thank for discovering Singsanong’s weaponized meat patties. The ground beef is studded with a minefield of fresh and dried hot chiles that sneak up and attack with every other bite. It’s seasoned with lots of palm sugar, but to balance all that sweetness there’s a deep umami funk. It could be courtesy of fish sauce and/or soy sauce, but again, Singsanong will never tell.
Singsanong created the burger for her kids’ school lunches years ago in an attempt to give them something that skewed more American. It’s now a favorite at Jitlada, where you can get one if and only if Singsanong is there — and if she feels like making it.