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My Easy In N Out Spread Recipe for Burgers at Home

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Some sauces make a burger good. This one makes it memorable. My in n out spread recipe is creamy, tangy, a little sweet, and easy to stir together in minutes.

I make this homemade copycat sauce when I want that familiar burger-shop flavor without leaving the house. It uses simple pantry staples, and the taste lands right where I want it, bright, rich, and pickle-forward.

Once you mix it once, you’ll start finding excuses to put it on everything.

What I Use for This Homemade Copycat Spread

This is my easy, at-home version inspired by the classic burger spread. It is not the restaurant’s exact recipe. Still, it gives me the same kind of flavor I crave on burgers, fries, and sandwiches.

Here are the basics at a glance:

DetailAmount
Prep time5 minutes
Chill time15 to 30 minutes, optional
YieldAbout 3/4 cup
Best useBurgers, fries, sandwiches

The ingredient list is short, which is part of the charm.

Fresh ingredients for homemade In-N-Out spread recipe arranged neatly on a wooden kitchen counter, including mayonnaise, ketchup, pickle relish, sugar, vinegar, and salt. Cinematic overhead shot with dramatic warm lighting and blurred kitchen background.

I use:

  • 1/2 cup mayonnaise
  • 3 tablespoons ketchup
  • 2 tablespoons sweet pickle relish
  • 1/2 teaspoon white sugar
  • 1 teaspoon white vinegar
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt

Mayonnaise gives the sauce its body, so I use a full-fat kind for the best texture. Ketchup adds color and that soft tomato sweetness. Then the relish brings the signature bite.

The sugar matters more than it seems. I only use a little, but it rounds out the sharpness from the vinegar. Salt ties the whole thing together.

If your relish is extra wet, drain off a bit of liquid first. That small step keeps the sauce thick enough to cling to a burger bun instead of sliding off.

How I Make My In N Out Spread Recipe

This recipe is almost too easy to call a recipe, which is one reason I keep making it. I don’t need a blender, food processor, or anything fancy. A bowl and spoon do the job.

Close-up of a glass mixing bowl filled with creamy homemade In-N-Out spread, featuring a wooden spoon resting inside to show the smooth blended texture of mayonnaise, ketchup, and relish on a marble countertop.

I follow these steps:

  1. Add the mayonnaise, ketchup, sweet pickle relish, sugar, vinegar, and salt to a medium bowl.
  2. Stir until the sauce looks smooth and even in color.
  3. Taste it right away, then adjust if needed.
  4. Cover and chill for 15 to 30 minutes if I want the flavor to meld more.

That is it. The whole process takes less time than toasting burger buns.

When I first stir it, the sauce can taste a little sharp from the vinegar. After a short chill, it settles down and tastes more balanced. If I have time, I always let it rest.

If the sauce tastes too sweet, I add a tiny splash of vinegar. If it tastes too tangy, I stir in a little more mayo.

I also pay attention to texture. A good burger spread should be thick, but not stiff. It should spread easily with the back of a spoon. If mine gets too thick after chilling, I loosen it with half a teaspoon of pickle juice or water.

For a smoother finish, I sometimes chop the relish a bit finer before mixing. That gives the sauce a more even texture, especially if I’m using it on sandwiches or wraps.

My Best Tips for Flavor, Texture, and Make-Ahead Storage

Small changes can shift this sauce fast, so I make adjustments in tiny amounts. A quarter teaspoon here or there is plenty.

For a stronger tang, I add a few drops of vinegar. For a softer, richer taste, I add another spoon of mayo. If I want more pickle flavor, I go with extra relish instead of extra salt.

This sauce thickens slightly in the fridge. That is normal. I store it in a sealed jar or airtight container, and it keeps well for up to 5 days. Before serving, I give it a quick stir.

If I know I’m making burgers for guests, I mix the sauce a day ahead. The flavor gets better after a few hours, and that saves me one last-minute task. It is the kind of prep that makes dinner feel easier.

A few notes help every time:

  • Use full-fat mayo if you want the closest texture.
  • Drain watery relish so the sauce stays creamy.
  • Chill the spread before serving if you want a more blended flavor.
  • Stir before each use, because a little separation can happen in the fridge.

I don’t freeze this sauce. Mayo-based sauces tend to split after thawing, and the texture turns odd. Fresh is better here.

The Best Ways I Serve This Burger Spread

Of course, my first choice is a burger. I spread it on both sides of a toasted bun, then add lettuce, tomato, onion, cheese, and a hot beef patty. The sauce melts into everything and brings the whole burger together.

Classic homemade double burger cut in half revealing two beef patties, American cheese, lettuce, tomato, onion, and thick In-N-Out style spread on a white plate.

I also use it far beyond burgers. It works as a dip for fries, a spread for turkey sandwiches, and a quick sauce for wraps. Sometimes I spoon a little onto grilled chicken sandwiches when I want something more interesting than plain mayo.

The flavor is familiar in the best way. It has that old-school drive-thru charm, but it tastes fresher because I made it myself. That is why this homemade copycat sauce stays in my fridge so often.

For the best bite, I don’t overdo it. About 1 to 2 tablespoons per burger is enough. Too much can drown out the meat and toppings, while the right amount gives every bite that creamy, tangy finish.

This recipe proves that a simple sauce can change the whole meal. When I want that classic burger flavor at home, this is the one I make.

My favorite part is how little effort it takes. A few pantry staples, one bowl, and a short stir give me a copycat spread that tastes right at home on a great burger.

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