There’s a specific kind of burger you have to eat with two hands and you don’t care. Thick, loose, 80/20 beef with a dark sear, Swiss pooled over the top, mushrooms piled on so high the bun sits at an angle, and a ramekin of warm au jus waiting on the side. The classic Mushroom Swiss burger is not a weeknight burger; it’s a Saturday-night-at-the-bar burger. And now you can make it at home.
The trick to incredible mushrooms is patience. If they go on wet, like only five minutes in the pan, barely cooked, they’re basically steaming on top of the patty. We cooked a lot of mushrooms to get this right, and the answer is time. Eight to ten minutes in butter over real heat until every bit of moisture is gone and they’re dark and almost meaty-smelling. That’s when you add the thyme and a splash of broth, letting the flavors really come together. If you’re going to take the time to make this burger, this is the flex that makes it.

🔪 Ingredients for Mushroom Swiss Burger
For the Patties:
- 80/20 ground beef: The fat ratio is the burger. 90/10 gives you a dry, compact puck. 80/20 stays juicy through the whole cook – especially important on a thick patty where the center takes time to reach temp.
- Kosher salt & Freshly cracked black pepper
For the Mushroom Topping:
- Cremini or button mushrooms, sliced: Either works. Cremini have a slightly deeper, earthier flavor; button mushrooms are more neutral and pick up the thyme and broth beautifully. Both need the full cook time.
- Butter: This is what the mushrooms cook in. It browns them better than oil and adds a richness the topping needs.
- Fresh thyme leaves
- Beef broth or Worcestershire: A small splash deglazes the pan and gives the mushrooms a savory depth that ties them to the au jus. Don’t skip this step.
For the Cheese and Buns:
- Swiss cheese
- Brioche or pub rolls
- Butter or mayo for toasting
For the Au Jus:
- Beef broth
- Salt and black pepper: Taste as you season.
Equipment
- 12-inch cast iron or stainless skillet: You need retained heat for the crust. Nonstick won’t build the sear this burger needs, the patty will steam instead of brown, giving you dull brown meat.
- A melding dome or a flat sheet pan: To trap steam and melt the Swiss in the final minutes.
- Instant-read thermometer: These are thick patties. Pull them at 140°F; they coast to 145°F during the rest.
📝 How to Make Mushroom Swiss Burger
- Form the patties. Divide 1 lb of 80/20 ground beef into two equal portions. Handle them as little as possible — four or five folds at most. Form into rounds about ¾ to 1 inch thick and press a shallow dimple into the center of each. If the patty feels firm and smooth, you’ve already overworked it. Season both sides generously with kosher salt and freshly cracked pepper right before cooking.
- Cook the mushrooms. Heat your skillet over medium-high heat. Add butter and let it melt. Add the mushrooms and a pinch of kosher salt. Cook for 8 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until they’ve released all their liquid, the pan sizzles steadily again, and the mushrooms are deeply browned and reduced by about half. Add the thyme and a splash of beef broth (or a few drops of Worcestershire) and cook 30 seconds more. Transfer to a plate; they should look dark, savory, and dry, not wet.
- Make the au jus. While the mushrooms cook, bring 1 cup of beef broth to a gentle simmer in a small saucepan. Season lightly with salt and pepper. Reduce just slightly, keep it thin. Set aside warm.
- Sear the patties. In the same skillet (don’t wipe it – that’s flavor), heat over medium-high until hot. Add the patties and leave them alone for 4 to 5 minutes to build a crust. Flip once. Reduce the heat slightly and cook another 4 to 5 minutes. Target internal temp: 140 to 145°F for medium. Note: USDA recommends ground beef reach 160°F. Cook to your preferred doneness.
- Melt the Swiss. In the final 1 to 2 minutes of cooking, lay a slice of Swiss over each patty and cover the pan. The cheese should fully melt and relax over the top. Pull the patties off the heat and rest for 3 to 4 minutes – carry-over cooking will bring them up to temp.
- Toast the buns. Butter the cut sides and toast in the skillet until golden brown. Untoasted buns go soggy fast once the au jus hits the table.
- Build and serve. Place the rested patty on the bottom bun. Spoon mushrooms generously over the cheese. Cap it all with the top bun. Serve immediately with warm au jus on the side for dipping.

🔄 Substitutions
- 80/20 beef → 85/15 or 90/10: The patty will be noticeably drier and denser. The crust still forms, but the flavor lacks and the meat dryer. Works in a pinch; but don’t expect the same result.
- Swiss → Gruyère: Melts beautifully and brings a richer, nuttier character to the whole burger. The topping and the cheese start to taste like they were always meant for each other. Use the same quantity.
- Swiss → provolone: Melts similarly but is noticeably milder. The mushrooms carry more of the weight. Flavor is cleaner but less layered.
- Brioche → standard burger bun: The bun softens significantly faster once the au jus hits the table. Eat quickly or toast it harder than you think necessary.
- Fresh thyme → dried: Use half the amount. The flavor is duller and slightly more woody. Still works, just less aromatic.
- Beef broth → bone broth: Deeper and more gelatinous. May not need as much seasoning since bone broth concentrates more intensely. The au jus gets a richer, slightly stickier mouthfeel.
💡 Meat Nerd Tips
- Season at the last second. Salt pulls moisture to the surface, which is exactly what you want for browning. But if it sits for more than a couple of minutes before hitting the heat, that moisture evaporates, and you lose the crust. Season, then immediately cook.
- The dimple is doing real work. A shallow depression in the center of the patty prevents the classic dome effect as it cooks. Without it, the center puffs up, the edges press flat, and your flip gets awkward. Press the dimple before seasoning.
- Let the mushrooms get there. Eight to ten minutes feels long. It isn’t. At five minutes, they’re still releasing liquid. At eight, they’re starting to brown. At ten, they’re dark, shrunken, and smell almost meaty. That is the moment you add the thyme. Don’t rush it.
- Thick patties need their rest. A 1-inch patty holds significant carry-over heat. Pull at 140°F, rest for 3 to 4 minutes, and it’ll reach 145°F on the board.

🍽️ What to Serve with Mushroom Swiss Burger
- Crispy oven fries or thick-cut wedges: The fries sopping up leftover au jus are so good.
- Arugula salad with lemon and olive oil: The bitterness cuts through the Swiss and resets the palate between bites – light enough that it doesn’t compete with the burger, just clears the lane.
- A cold lager or dark stout: The malt plays directly off the caramelized mushrooms. The burger tastes more intentional with the right drink next to it than it does alone.
- More burger night ideas: Check out our full burger lineup for what else pairs well with a pub-style spread.
🧊 Leftovers and Storage
- Store separately: Patties, mushrooms, and au jus each in their own airtight container. The mushrooms go soggy on top of the patty overnight.
- Refrigerator: All three components keep for up to 3 days.
- Reheat the patty: Covered skillet over low heat with a small splash of water, 3 to 4 minutes. The microwave works, but the crust softens significantly.
- Reheat the mushrooms: Two minutes in a hot, dry skillet brings them back. Don’t add butter — they’ll reabsorb and go greasy.
- Reheat the au jus: Small saucepan over low heat. Taste and adjust seasoning before serving.
- Freezing: Don’t freeze cooked patties — the texture degrades on thaw. Freeze raw patties instead, separated by parchment, up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before cooking.
Have you tried this recipe? Do us a favor and rate the recipe card with the ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ and drop a comment to help out the next reader.
The mushroom Swiss burger hits different when you take the time to cook the mushrooms just right. The first bite, when you dip the corner into warm au jus and the broth soaks into the toasted brioche puts every pub burgers you’ve ever had to shame.
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For the Mushroom Topping:
Cook the Mushrooms
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Melt butter in a 12-inch skillet over medium-high heat. Add mushrooms and a pinch of salt. Cook 8–10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until deeply browned and reduced by half. Add thyme and a splash of beef broth or Worcestershire; cook 30 seconds. Transfer to a plate.
- Store patties and mushrooms separately in airtight containers; refrigerate up to 3 days.
- Reheat patties in a covered skillet over low with a splash of water for 3–4 minutes.
- Freeze raw patties, separated by parchment, up to 3 months.
- Gruyère substitutes 1:1 for Swiss for a richer, nuttier result.
- The USDA recommends ground beef reach 160°F. But we grind our own meat and cook to medium (140–145°F) – if you don’t grind your own beef, or know your butcher, it’s always safer to follow the USDA guidelines.
Serving: 1serving | Calories: 763kcal | Carbohydrates: 7g | Protein: 49g | Fat: 60g | Saturated Fat: 26g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 23g | Trans Fat: 3g | Cholesterol: 201mg | Sodium: 710mg | Potassium: 1333mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 2g | Vitamin A: 460IU | Vitamin C: 2mg | Calcium: 232mg | Iron: 5mg

Quick Summary
The mushroom Swiss burger is a pub-style thick patty built for the skillet — big, loose-formed 80/20 beef with a dark sear, deeply caramelized mushrooms, Swiss melted over the top, and warm au jus on the side for dipping. Take the full 8 to 10 minutes on the mushrooms and don’t touch the patty until it’s ready to flip. The rest handles itself.
❓ FAQs
Swiss is the classic for a reason – it melts cleanly over a thick patty without going greasy. Gruyère is the upgrade: deeper, nuttier, and it pairs with caramelized mushrooms in a way that makes the whole burger taste more intentional. If you want something milder, provolone melts similarly but contributes less to the overall flavor.
80/20, full stop. The fat content is what makes a pub-style burger different from a dry, compact patty. It’s also what keeps a thick patty juicy all the way to the center while the outside gets its crust. Don’t go leaner.
Medium — 140 to 145°F internal — is where this burger shines. It’s a thick patty with real fat content, and a touch more doneness than you’d give a thin smash patty serves the meat well. USDA recommends ground beef reach 160°F; cook to your preferred doneness. Pull the patty at 140°F and rest 3 to 4 minutes, and it coasts right into place.
Yes. Pre-sliced cremini or button mushrooms work perfectly. If the slices are thick, they’ll take a minute or two longer to cook down; let your eyes guide you. You want them dark, shrunken, and dry before you add the thyme. When the pan stops steaming and starts sizzling again, you’re close.
