Ground Beef Patties

Beef patties with salt and pepper.

Ground Beef Patties
Prep 5 min
Cook 10 min
Serves 4
Gluten-freeDairy-free

Ingredients

  • 1 pound fresh ground beef
  • 1/2 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper (optional)
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil (for the pan)

Instructions

  1. Divide the ground beef into 4 equal portions.
  2. Gently form each portion into a patty about 3/4-inch thick. Do not overwork the meat.
  3. Make a small indent in the center of each patty with your thumb. This prevents puffing during cooking.
  4. Season both sides with salt and pepper if using.
  5. Heat olive oil in a cast iron or heavy skillet over medium-high heat.
  6. Add the patties and cook without moving for 3-4 minutes until a crust forms.
  7. Flip and cook another 3-4 minutes until the center reaches 160°F (71°C), which is the safe temperature for ground beef.
  8. Let rest for 2 minutes before serving.

Tips & Substitutions

  • Buy fresh ground beef. Ask your butcher to grind it to order if possible, or buy same-day. Freshness is especially important for ground meat because of the increased surface area.
  • Do not overwork the meat. Handle it as little as possible when forming patties. Overworking makes them dense and tough instead of juicy.
  • Press an indent in the center. This prevents the patties from puffing up into balls as they cook, giving you a flat, even patty.
  • Swap beef for ground lamb or bison. Both are low histamine alternatives that cook the same way. Use the same seasoning and timing.
  • Serve on a gluten-free bun, over a salad, or with roasted potatoes. This is a versatile protein that pairs with almost any low histamine side.

Why This Works

Fresh ground beef. Beef is naturally low in histamine when purchased and cooked fresh. Ground meat has more surface area exposed to air, so freshness matters more here than with whole cuts.

Sea salt. A pure seasoning with no additives or histamine concerns. It enhances the natural beef flavor without needing complex spice blends.

Olive oil. A stable, low histamine cooking fat that prevents sticking and helps form a nice crust on the patties.

Minimal ingredients. Keeping the recipe simple reduces the chance of encountering a trigger ingredient. With just meat, salt, and oil, this is about as safe as a protein can be.

Storage

Best eaten immediately after cooking. If you need to store leftovers, cool quickly, refrigerate promptly, and eat within 24 hours. Reheating to 165°F (74°C) improves food safety but does not reduce histamine that has already formed. Cooked ground beef accumulates histamine over time, so cooking fresh is always the best approach.

Not sure if an ingredient is safe? Histamine Tracker includes a database of 1,000+ foods with histamine ratings to help you cook with confidence.

For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional for personal guidance.

References

  1. Low Histamine Meat Tips and Common Mistakes — MastCell360 (Beth O'Hara)
  2. The Food List — Histamine Intolerance Awareness (UK)
  3. Low Histamine Diet: Foods to Eat and Avoid — Wyndly
  4. Histamine and histamine intolerance — Maintz & Novak (2007)
  5. Histamine Intolerance: The Current State of the Art — Comas-Basté et al. (2020)
  6. Biogenic Amines in Plant-Origin Foods: Are They Frequently Underestimated in Low-Histamine Diets? — Sánchez-Pérez et al. (2021)
  7. Diamine Oxidase Supplementation Improves Symptoms in Patients with Histamine Intolerance — Schnedl et al. (2019)
  8. Histamine Intolerance — A Comprehensive Review — Jochum (2024)