Big Mac Tacos (Smash Burger Tacos)

I made these the first time because I was out of burger buns and not about to drive anywhere. Ground beef, tortilla, cheese, that sauce everyone pretends they can’t make at home. Turns out you can, and it takes about the same effort as a regular taco night.

Big Mac Tacos rode a huge wave on TikTok a couple years back — smash burger technique pressed straight onto a tortilla instead of a bun. The beef cooks right into the flour tortilla, the fat renders into it a little, and you get something crispier than a burger and faster than both. I’m not claiming to have invented the idea. I am claiming it’s worth your Tuesday night.

Why This Works

The whole trick is pressing raw beef onto the tortilla before it hits the pan, not cooking a patty and adding a tortilla after. That’s what gives you the golden, lacy crust — thin beef, high heat, max contact with the metal. Skip the smash step and you just get a regular taco with ground beef in it, which is fine, but it’s not this.

High heat matters more than people expect here. Cook these on medium and the beef steams instead of searing — you lose the crust, and the tortilla goes soft and a bit gummy instead of crisping at the edges. The pan needs to be smoking before the first tortilla goes in. Non-negotiable.

The lid-for-30-seconds move on the cheese isn’t just a garnish step either — it’s doing real work. American cheese (or cheddar) needs a beat of trapped heat to go fully glossy and melt into the meat rather than just softening on top. Without the lid you get cheese that’s warm but not bonded to the beef, and it slides right off when you fold the taco.

Ingredients

For the Big Mac Sauce

  • 3 tbsp mayonnaise
  • 3 tbsp ketchup
  • 1 tsp apple cider vinegar (or white wine vinegar)
  • ½ tsp Tabasco, or your favorite hot sauce
  • 2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tsp mustard

For Serving

  • 1 iceberg lettuce leaf, finely sliced
  • 2 tbsp finely chopped dill pickles

For the Tacos

  • 200 g ground beef (10% fat)
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • 4 small flour tortillas
  • Vegetable oil, for cooking
  • 8 slices American cheese or American cheddar

Instructions

  1. Whisk together all the Big Mac Sauce ingredients in a small bowl. Set aside.
  2. Get the lettuce and pickles ready now — you won’t have time once the beef hits the pan.
  3. Mix the ground beef with salt and pepper.
  4. Press a thin, even layer of beef onto each tortilla. Do all four before you turn on the stove.
  5. Preheat a skillet or griddle over high heat until it’s smoking.
  6. Add a little oil, then place one tortilla in the pan, beef side down.
  7. Smash it flat with something wide and heavy — the bottom of a saucepan works. Leave it 1–2 minutes, then flip.
  8. Lay two cheese slices on top of the beef, cover with a lid, and let it sit 30 seconds so the cheese melts properly.
  9. Remove from the pan and repeat with the rest.
  10. Serve with lettuce, pickles, and the sauce.

Servings: 2 Prep time: 20 minutes Cook time: 5 minutes Total time: 25 minutes

Tips

  • Have every topping — lettuce, pickles, sauce — sitting on the counter before the first tortilla touches the pan. These go cold fast once they’re off the heat, and you will not have time to slice a pickle mid-cook.
  • If you’re making a big batch, hold the finished ones in the oven at 120°C/240°F on a wire rack. A plate just steams them soft. The rack keeps air moving underneath so the bottom stays crisp.
  • Don’t skip pressing the beef all the way to the edges of the tortilla. Bare tortilla edges burn before the middle cooks through.

Variations

Swap the American cheese for sharp cheddar if you want more bite — I actually prefer it that way, the sauce is sweet enough that it can take a stronger cheese. Skip the idea of using corn tortillas, though. I tried it once and the beef just doesn’t stick the same way; flour holds onto the raw meat when you press it, corn cracks apart. Not worth it.

Make-Ahead

The sauce keeps in the fridge for a few days, so make that ahead if you want to save time. The tacos themselves don’t. Once they’re cooked and sitting, the tortilla softens and the crisp edge disappears within maybe ten minutes. This is a cook-and-eat-immediately dish, not a meal-prep one.

FAQ

Can I use beef patties instead of loose ground beef? No — patties are too thick and won’t cook through fast enough at this heat, and you lose the whole point of the smash technique.

Is Big Mac sauce the same as Thousand Island dressing? They’re close cousins. Both are mayo-based, but classic Thousand Island usually skips the Worcestershire and hot sauce kick this version has.

What if I don’t have a griddle? A regular non-stick or cast iron skillet on the stove works fine — just make sure it’s big enough that the tortilla lies flat.

Can I make these ahead for a party? Not really, and I’d steer you away from trying. Cook them to order or right before people sit down.

Closing Thoughts

These pair well with something acidic on the side — a quick vinegar slaw or even just extra pickles, since the tacos themselves lean rich.

About the Author

I’m Kima, and I test recipes the way most people avoid doing dishes — repeatedly, until the method actually holds up on a weeknight, not just on camera.

Kima

Big Mac Tacos (Smash Burger Tacos)

These Big Mac Tacos combine crispy flour tortillas with juicy smashed beef, melted American cheese, shredded lettuce, dill pickles, and a creamy homemade burger sauce. They are ready in just 25 minutes for an easy dinner or weekend meal.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings: 2 people
Course: Dinner, Main Course
Cuisine: American

Ingredients
  

For the Big Mac Sauce
  • 3 tbsp mayonnaise
  • 3 tbsp ketchup
  • 1 tsp apple cider vinegar or white wine vinegar
  • 1/2 tsp Tabasco or your favorite hot sauce
  • 2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tsp mustard
For Serving
  • 1 leaf iceberg lettuce finely sliced
  • 2 tbsp dill pickles finely chopped
For the Big Mac Tacos
  • 200 g ground beef 10% fat
  • salt to taste
  • black pepper to taste
  • 4 small flour tortillas
  • vegetable oil for cooking
  • 8 slices American cheese or American cheddar

Equipment

  • 1 Small mixing bowl
  • 1 Small whisk
  • 1 Large skillet or griddle
  • 1 Lid For helping the cheese melt
  • 1 Flat-bottomed saucepan or burger press For smashing the tacos
  • 1 Cooling rack Optional, for keeping the tacos warm

Method
 

  1. Add the mayonnaise, ketchup, vinegar, hot sauce, Worcestershire sauce, and mustard to a small bowl. Whisk until smooth, then set the Big Mac sauce aside.
  2. Finely slice the iceberg lettuce and chop the dill pickles. Keep both toppings ready before cooking the tacos.
  3. Place the ground beef in a bowl and season it with salt and black pepper. Mix gently until combined.
  4. Divide the seasoned beef evenly among the four tortillas. Press a very thin, even layer of beef over one side of each tortilla, reaching close to the edges.
  5. Preheat a large skillet or griddle over high heat until very hot and beginning to smoke.
  6. Lightly coat the hot skillet with vegetable oil. Place one tortilla in the skillet with the beef side facing down.
  7. Press the tortilla firmly into the skillet using a burger press or the flat bottom of a saucepan. Cook for 1–2 minutes, or until the beef is browned and develops crisp edges.
  8. Flip the taco so the tortilla side faces down. Place two slices of American cheese over the cooked beef.
  9. Cover the skillet with a lid and cook for about 30 seconds, or until the cheese is fully melted and the tortilla is lightly toasted.
  10. Transfer the cooked taco to a plate or cooling rack. Repeat the cooking process with the remaining tortillas.
  11. Top each smash burger taco with shredded lettuce, chopped dill pickles, and a generous drizzle of the prepared Big Mac sauce.
  12. Fold the tacos and serve immediately while the beef and cheese are still warm.

Notes

Prepare the toppings first: These tacos cook very quickly and can cool down fast, so have the lettuce, pickles, cheese, and sauce ready before heating the skillet.
Use a very hot skillet: A smoking-hot pan helps the beef develop the browned, crispy surface associated with smash burgers.
Press the beef thinly: Spread the ground beef in a thin, even layer over each tortilla so it cooks completely in just a few minutes.
Keep the tacos warm: Place cooked tacos on a cooling rack in a 240°F or 120°C oven while finishing the remaining tacos. The rack allows air to circulate and helps prevent soggy tortillas.
Smashing tool: A burger press works well, but the flat bottom of a heavy saucepan can also be used.

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