The Halloumi Burger That Made Me Stop Ordering Burgers
These halloumi burgers are the reason I keep halloumi in the fridge year-round. Crisp golden cheese, paprika aioli, sharp pickles, and soft toasted buns come together in the kind of dinner that leaves fingerprints on napkins and everyone reaching across the tray for one more fry before sitting down.

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My grandmother believed burgers were proof that people had stopped trying. She liked proper meals served on plates with cloth napkins folded into triangles, soups ladled carefully into bowls, pickled mushrooms arranged in glass dishes that only came out for guests. Food carried structure in her apartment. It carried expectation.
Bread, meat, sauce, eaten with your hands felt careless to her. Cheese as the center of the meal would have made her sigh heavily before turning around and walking away in theatrical disappointment.

Still, if it had been halloumi, she would have tried it. That part I know for certain.
The first time I made these halloumi burgers, the kitchen windows were open despite the rain outside. Leo kept climbing onto the stool to steal pickle slices while Lin asked whether the cheese would melt like mozzarella. The smell carried through the apartment quickly. Fried cheese in olive oil has a way of doing that. It clings to curtains and sweaters and the backs of your hands long after dinner is over.
I started making halloumi years ago. The cheese squeaked slightly against your teeth when eaten hot, the edges deeply golden from the grill. Since then, it becomes folded into these crispy halloumi tacos when I want something fast after school pickup. Or cut into thick fries like these harissa halloumi fries. During summer evenings, I often rely on my guide for how to grill halloumi cheese, especially when friends stay late outside talking long after the children fall asleep.

This burger came later. Part Middle Eastern café plate, part North American diner meal, part something that belongs fully to our family now. The crisp outer layer catches onto the creamy sauce while tomatoes soften slightly against the heat of the cheese.
By the time everyone sits down, the fries have already started disappearing from the tray. Plates balanced on laps, fingerprints on the buns, someone always reaching for another napkin.
A dinner my grandmother would have called impractical while quietly taking another bite.
Ingredients

Halloumi is the center of these burgers, and the entire recipe leans on its texture. I always look for firm blocks packed in brine because they fry into deeply golden edges while keeping their shape in the middle. I’ve learned that thinner supermarket versions tend to dry out too quickly in the pan. Cypriot halloumi gives the best texture here, though bread cheese can work if needed. It softens similarly when fried, though with a milder flavor.
The burger buns matter more than people think. A soft bun holds the hot cheese and aioli together without turning dense or dry. Brioche buns are the ones I reach for most often because the slight sweetness works well against the salty halloumi and sharp pickles. Potato buns also work nicely, especially for children since they stay softer longer on the table.
Dill pickles cut through the richness of the fried halloumi and creamy sauce. I prefer garlic-heavy deli pickles packed in brine rather than sweeter sandwich pickles. The sharper bite balances the cheese better, especially once everything is layered together inside the bun.
See the recipe card for full list and exact quantities.
Top Tips
Dry the Halloumi More Than You Think You Need To – the biggest difference between pale halloumi and deeply golden halloumi comes down to moisture. I usually press the slices between paper towels twice before they ever touch the skillet. If the surface still looks glossy from brine, the cheese steams instead of browning properly.
Build the Burgers at the Last Minute – I learned this after making a full tray ahead for friends one summer evening. Halloumi keeps its texture best straight from the skillet. Once assembled too early, the steam from the cheese softens the lettuce and bread faster than expected. Keep everything prepared separately and build right before serving.
Use Medium Heat Instead of High – it is tempting to rush the browning, though halloumi behaves better over medium heat. Too much heat gives you dark edges while the center stays stiff and overly salty. Slower cooking creates a softer middle with crisp edges that hold inside the burger without turning rubbery.
How to Make Halloumi Burger Recipe With All the Fixings

These halloumi burgers recipe come together quickly once the skillet heats, so having everything sliced and ready beforehand makes the process feel much calmer. The contrast between the crisp cheese, cool vegetables, soft bun, and creamy aioli is what makes these burgers work so well. Pay attention to texture as you go rather than relying only on timing:
Mix the Smoked Paprika Aioli


- The aioli should look creamy and spreadable, not thin or runny.
- If too much lemon juice is added, the sauce can loosen too much and slide out of the burger later. You want something thick enough to cling to the bun and halloumi without dripping immediately.
- Set the sauce aside while preparing the remaining ingredients so the flavors have time to settle together.
Pat the Halloumi Dry Thoroughly
- Before frying, press the halloumi slices gently between paper towels to remove excess moisture.
- The slices should feel slightly tacky on the surface rather than slippery. If they still look glossy from brine, keep drying them a little longer.
Fry the Halloumi Until Deeply Golden

- At first, the cheese will hiss gently around the edges. Leave it untouched for the first few minutes. Moving it too early can tear the surface before the crust develops properly.
- If the skillet becomes too hot, the outside darkens before the center softens slightly. Lower the heat if the cheese browns too aggressively within the first minute.
- Cook the second side until both surfaces are evenly golden with lightly crisp edges.
Toast the Burger Buns Lightly
- Slice the buns and toast them until the inside develops a light golden color while staying soft in the center.
- You are not looking for crunchy bread here. Over-toasted buns become difficult to bite through once layered with halloumi and vegetables. The inside should feel lightly crisp enough to hold the aioli without becoming soggy immediately.
- Watch carefully during this step since buns can darken quickly, especially softer brioche-style ones.
Assemble the Burgers While the Halloumi Is Hot


- The heat softens the vegetables slightly and helps the aioli settle into the layers. Add the red onion and pickles last for crunch and sharpness.
- The burgers may look slightly overfilled at first, though the layers compress naturally once closed. Spread more aioli onto the top bun before placing it over everything gently.
Serve Immediately While Hot

- Serve with hot French fries alongside extra aioli for dipping if desired. As the burgers sit, the halloumi firms slightly and the vegetables begin softening into the bread, so timing matters here.
Storage

These halloumi burgers are best eaten fresh while the cheese is still crisp at the edges. If storing leftovers, keep the components separate so the vegetables do not soften the buns overnight.

Fried halloumi keeps in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days and reheats best in a dry skillet rather than the microwave, which can make it rubbery. The smoked paprika aioli lasts up to 4 days refrigerated and thickens slightly as it sits. Cooked halloumi can also be frozen for up to 1 month, though the texture becomes slightly chewier after thawing.
FAQ
Halloumi usually turns rubbery when cooked over heat that is too high or left in the skillet too long. The cheese should develop golden edges while still feeling slightly soft in the center. Medium heat works best here because it gives the inside time to soften before the outside darkens too much.
This often comes down to moisture. Halloumi packed in brine needs to be dried thoroughly before frying. If the slices still feel wet, the cheese steams instead of forming a crust. A properly heated skillet also matters. The pan should already be hot before the halloumi touches it.
Yes. The aioli actually tastes better after resting for a few hours in the refrigerator because the garlic and paprika settle into the mayonnaise. Stir it again before serving since it thickens slightly as it chills.
Yes. Use gluten-free burger buns and double check the Dijon mustard and halloumi packaging if needed. The cheese itself is naturally gluten-free in most cases, though some brands vary slightly.
Not really. Halloumi keeps its shape when heated instead of melting. The texture stays firmer and slightly chewy, which is why it works so well for frying, grilling, and layering into burgers.
Recipe
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Grilled Halloumi Burgers With All the Fixings
Golden halloumi burgers layered with smoky aioli, tomatoes, pickles, and toasted buns.
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Ingredients
For the Halloumi Burgers
- 8 oz halloumi cheese sliced into 4 slabs
- 4 burger buns
- 1 red onion thinly sliced
- 8 lettuce leaves
- 2 tomatoes sliced
- 4 dill pickles sliced
- 2 tsps olive oil
- 1 teaspoon salt
- black pepper
For the Smoked Aioli
- ⅓ cup mayonnaise
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice
- 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
- 1 small garlic clove minced
- ½ teaspoon smoked paprika
- Pinch salt
- Pinch black pepper
Instructions
Make the Smoked Aioli
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In a small bowl, stir together the mayonnaise, lemon juice, Dijon mustard, garlic, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper until smooth. The sauce should look creamy and thick enough to spread easily onto the buns without dripping. Set aside so the flavors settle together while you prepare the burgers.
Prepare the Halloumi
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Pat the halloumi slices dry with paper towels. This helps the cheese form crisp golden edges instead of steaming in the pan. If the slices still feel wet from the brine, dry them a little longer before frying.
Assemble the Halloumi Burgers
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Spread the smoked aioli onto the bottom half of each bun. Layer with lettuce, tomatoes, fried halloumi, red onion, and dill pickles. Add more aioli to the top bun before closing the burgers gently.
Nutrition
Calories: 484kcalCarbohydrates: 31gProtein: 19gFat: 32gSaturated Fat: 13gPolyunsaturated Fat: 10gMonounsaturated Fat: 8gTrans Fat: 0.04gCholesterol: 8mgSodium: 2150mgPotassium: 423mgFiber: 3gSugar: 8gVitamin A: 4323IUVitamin C: 23mgCalcium: 699mgIron: 2mg




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