Big Mac Smash Burger Tacos

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Big Mac Smash Burger Tacos hit the table with the kind of crisp-edged, juicy bite that keeps people reaching for a second one before the first is gone. The beef gets smashed hard enough to pick up a dark crust, the tortilla softens just enough to hold everything, and the sauce brings that familiar tangy-sweet finish that makes the whole thing taste like a fast-food mashup done better at home.

The key is keeping the patties thin and the skillet screaming hot. That gives you the browned, lacy edges that make smash burgers worth the extra effort, instead of a round of gray, steamed beef. The sauce is built like the one you already know, but a little extra mustard and relish keep it bright enough to cut through the cheese and beef.

Below you’ll find the small details that matter most: how to get the pan hot enough, when to press the meat, and the easiest way to keep the tortillas warm while you cook in batches. Those little timing decisions are what turn this from a novelty into a dinner you’ll want to repeat.

The patties crisped up fast and the sauce tasted just like the burger version, but better on a tortilla. I liked that the cheese melted right onto the meat instead of sliding off, and the onions stayed sharp enough to balance the richness.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Like this crispy, saucy burger-taco mashup? Save it to Pinterest for the nights when you want fast smash burger tacos with Big Mac sauce and almost no cleanup.

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The Reason the Beef Gets Crispy Instead of Steamed

Smash burger tacos only work when the beef has room to brown. If the skillet isn’t hot enough, the meat releases moisture before the crust sets and you end up with soft, pale patties that taste more boiled than seared. A cast-iron skillet helps hold that heat, and cooking in batches keeps the pan from cooling down the moment the beef hits it.

Pressing the patties hard for the first minute is what creates those irregular, lacy edges. After that, leave them alone until they release naturally. If they stick, they aren’t ready yet. Trying to force them up too soon tears the crust and leaves flavor stuck to the pan instead of on the taco.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing in These Tacos

  • 80/20 ground beef — That fat content is what gives you the juicy center and the browned edges. Leaner beef can work, but it dries out faster and doesn’t give the same burger-like texture.
  • American cheese — It melts smoothly and clings to the meat instead of turning oily or grainy. If you swap it, use another meltable cheese sliced thin, because thick shreds won’t settle into the patties the same way.
  • Big Mac sauce — The mayo base carries the seasoning, while relish and mustard keep it tangy enough to cut the beef. Thousand Island-style dressing can stand in, but it usually tastes sweeter and less sharp.
  • Corn or flour tortillas — Flour tortillas bend more easily around the fillings, while corn tortillas give a better toasted edge and a little more flavor. Warm them before filling, or they’ll crack when you fold them over the beef.
  • Pickles, lettuce, and onion — These toppings aren’t decoration. They bring crunch, acid, and freshness that keep the tacos from tasting heavy after the first bite.

Building the Smash Burger Tacos in the Right Order

Mix the Sauce First

Whisk the mayonnaise, ketchup, relish, mustard, and paprika until the sauce looks smooth and pale orange. Give it a taste and adjust with salt and pepper, because the beef and cheese are rich enough to handle a punchy sauce. Making it first gives the flavors a chance to settle while you cook, which softens any sharp mayo edge.

Get the Skillet Hot Before the Beef Goes In

Heat the cast-iron skillet over high heat until it is genuinely hot, not just warm. A drop of water should sizzle and disappear almost immediately. Add just a thin film of vegetable oil, then place the beef patties in the pan with space between them so they can brown instead of steaming.

Press, Sear, and Leave Them Alone

Form the beef into eight thin patties, then smash each one down hard with a spatula as soon as it hits the skillet. Hold the pressure for a moment so the meat makes full contact with the pan, and cook for 1 to 2 minutes until the edges turn dark and crisp. Flip once, cook the second side briefly, and avoid pressing again after the first smash or you’ll squeeze out the juices.

Melt the Cheese and Assemble Fast

Top four patties with American cheese right after the flip so the residual heat can melt it. Warm the tortillas while the cheese softens, then spread sauce on each tortilla and layer on a patty, pickles, lettuce, and diced onion. Add a second patty if you want a taller taco, then serve them immediately while the beef is still crisp and the tortillas are warm.

How to Adapt These Tacos for Different Nights

Make Them with Flour Tortillas for a Softer Bite

Flour tortillas fold more easily and hold the fillings with less cracking, especially if you like stacking on a second patty. They don’t have the toasty corn flavor, but they do give you a softer, more classic taco shell feel that works well with the rich beef and sauce.

Swap in a Dairy-Free Cheese or Skip It

A dairy-free cheese slice can stand in if you choose one that melts well, though it usually won’t cling as neatly as American cheese. If you leave cheese off entirely, the tacos still work, but the sauce and pickles need to do more of the balancing, so keep the toppings bright and crisp.

Use Ground Turkey for a Lighter Version

Ground turkey can work, but it needs more seasoning and careful heat because it dries out faster than beef. Add a little oil to the pan and pull it off the heat as soon as it is cooked through, since overcooking turkey makes the filling crumbly instead of juicy.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store the cooked patties and toppings separately for up to 3 days. The beef will keep its best texture if it isn’t left sitting in sauce.
  • Freezer: The cooked patties freeze well for up to 2 months. Freeze them flat on a tray first, then move them to a bag so they don’t stick together.
  • Reheating: Reheat the patties in a hot skillet or air fryer until warmed through and the edges crisp back up. The microwave softens the crust, which is the first thing you lose on a second round.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use flour tortillas instead of corn tortillas?+

Yes, and flour tortillas are often easier to fold around the fillings. They stay softer and are less likely to crack, especially if you stack on a second patty. Corn tortillas give a little more flavor and a better toasted edge, so it comes down to the texture you want.

How do I keep the beef from sticking when I smash it?+

Use a very hot skillet and don’t try to move the patty too soon. The beef will release once the crust has formed, and that crust is what gives you the flavor and the clean flip. A thin layer of oil helps, but heat is the main fix here.

Can I make Big Mac sauce ahead of time?+

Yes, and it actually tastes better after sitting for a few hours. The relish and mustard mellow into the mayo, so the sauce gets more cohesive. Keep it covered in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.

How do I keep the tacos from getting soggy?+

Assemble them right before serving and keep the sauce under control. A thin layer on the tortilla is enough, because the beef and pickles already bring moisture. If you let the tacos sit, the tortillas soften fast under the heat and juices from the meat.

Can I make these ahead for a party?+

You can cook the patties and prep the toppings ahead, but wait to assemble until guests are ready to eat. Reheat the beef in a hot skillet so the edges crisp back up, then build the tacos quickly. That keeps the texture close to fresh instead of turning everything soft.

Big Mac Smash Burger Tacos

Big Mac smash burger tacos with crispy, thin smashed patties and a tangy Big Mac sauce. Built on warm tortillas with melted American cheese, pickles, shredded lettuce, and diced onion.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Dinner
Cuisine: Mexican
Calories: 830

Ingredients
  

ground beef (80/20 blend)
  • 1 lb ground beef (80/20 blend)
onion
  • 0.5 onion thinly sliced
corn tortillas or small flour tortillas
  • 8 corn tortillas or small flour tortillas or small flour tortillas
American cheese
  • 4 American cheese slices
vegetable oil
  • 1 tbsp vegetable oil for the skillet
Big Mac sauce
  • 0.5 cup mayonnaise
  • 2 tbsp ketchup
  • 1 tbsp relish
  • 1 tsp mustard
  • 1 tsp paprika
  • 0.25 tsp salt to taste
  • 0.25 tsp pepper to taste
pickles
  • 0.25 cup pickles shredded
shredded lettuce
  • 0.5 cup shredded lettuce
diced onion
  • 0.25 cup diced onion

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Make the Big Mac sauce
  1. Whisk together mayonnaise, ketchup, relish, mustard, and paprika with salt and pepper until smooth and creamy.
Smash the patties
  1. Heat a cast-iron skillet over high heat until very hot, then add a thin film of vegetable oil.
  2. Form ground beef into 8 thin patties for faster cooking and maximum crisp edges.
  3. Cook the patties in batches, pressing down hard with a spatula for 1-2 minutes per side until the edges look deeply browned and crisp.
  4. Top 4 patties with American cheese and cook just until the cheese melts and turns glossy.
Warm tortillas and build tacos
  1. Warm the tortillas in a dry spot on the skillet until pliable and lightly steamy.
  2. Spread Big Mac sauce on each tortilla, using a generous layer that reaches the edges.
  3. Layer with a smashed patty, then add shredded lettuce, shredded pickles, and diced onion for crunch and tang.
  4. Top with another patty if desired, then serve immediately so the tortillas stay warm and the patties stay crisp.

Notes

Pro tip: press each patty down hard immediately after it hits the skillet so you get those crisp, lacy edges—avoid moving the meat until it releases. Store leftover patties and toppings separately in the fridge up to 3 days; rewarm patties in a hot skillet to regain crispness (freeze patties up to 2 months, assemble fresh). For a lighter option, swap 80/20 ground beef for 90/10 and use light mayonnaise in the Big Mac sauce while keeping the same smash-and-sear method.

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