Showing posts with label Sausage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sausage. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Mild Italian Link Sausage

 
  Who doesn't like sausage? The only thing I dislike about store bought sausage is most of it contains MSG (or natural salt if you want to be evasive). An allergy to MSG prevents some of our family from partaking in MSG laden foods, so we have to take matters in to our own hands when it comes to things like sausage. Preparing this sausage is a little extra work, but very satisfying in the end. I recommend doing as much sausage making as you can while all the sausage making gear is out. It isn't hard and maybe this entry will push you over the edge to try it yourself.

Mild Italian Link Sausage
2 lbs pork butt (with fat)
2 tsp kosher salt (or sea salt)
1 1/2 tsp black pepper, ground
1/2 tsp garlic powder
1 tbsp dried parsley
1 1/2 tsp fennel seed, ground
5 ft natural casing

For Hot Sausage Add:
2 1/2 tsp paprika, ground
1/4 tsp anise seed, ground
2 tsp red pepper flakes

  Mix all seasoning ingredients together. Cut the pork into chunks. Mix the pork and seasonings together. Grind the pork mixture with your choice of meat grinding hardware.

  Our choice of sausage stuffing and grinding hardware was the sausage attachments for our KitchenAid mixer. We used the fine die on the mixer for grinding, but recommend using the course or large die. The next time we do this we will definitely use the larger die for grinding. Once the pork is ground, refrigerate the mixture for at least an hour while preparing the casings. The mixture should be cold while stuffing the sausage.

  We used natural casings obtained from a local kitchen store. The package is fairly small and could easily be ordered from the internet if you cannot find it locally. You may want to consider using collagen casings instead of the natural casings if that is more to your liking. There is a lot of information on the internet about the different kinds of sausage casings and plenty of places to order them from. Any leftover casings can easily be stored either in your pantry or refrigerator depending on the type you choose. To prepare our casings we had to soak them in warm water and rinse them thoroughly.

  When the ground pork mixture was chilled for an hour, I tied one end of a prepared casing into a knot and slid the other end on to the sausage making tip all the way up to the knotted end. I turned on the mixer and started stuffing the ground pork mixture into the hopper which feeds an auger which eventually pushes the pork in to the casing. Continue until the casing is completely full or you run out of meat.

This particular batch was grilled with sweet onions and peppers and served on a soft italian roll.
A few things we learned along the way:
- Any left over natural casings can be stored in your refrigerator, sealed in the original bag completely covered in salt for up to a year.
- To clean out the auger after making the sausage, send a few pieces of bread through the system to push out any left over meat. This greatly simplified the cleanup.

Enjoy!

TTFN
B

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Grilled Breakfast Pizza


  This is fun to do and super yummy. It is common for us to go through the fridge on a Saturday or Sunday morning and use whatever is in there to make omelettes and the like. Seems fairly natural (to me) to do a pizza like this too. :-) This version really was conceived about an hour before we made it based on what we had lying around. Like omelettes, there are no hard and fast rules.

Grilled Breakfast Pizza
21 oz pizza dough ball (store bought or homemade)
3-4 oz thick sausage gravy, prepared
4 oz shredded cheddar 
4 small leftover potatoes, roughly cubed
1 medium onion, roughly sliced
2 Tbsp olive oil
6 eggs
1/2 lb browned sausage (recipe)
12 stalks barely cooked asparagus

  Saute onions in olive oil until caramelized. Add potatoes and cook for another 5 minutes. Set aside. Preheat grill and pizza stone for 10 minutes with burners set at about medium. A more in depth discussion on cooking pizza on a grill can be found here. I built the pizza on a 16" pizza screen. The dough is stretched in to a 16" circle and layed on the screen. Cover with sausage gravy. Spread onion and potato mixture evenly. Spread cheese evenly. Spread sausage evenly. Use you fingers to make 6, evenly distributed, egg wells in the toppings. Don't press too hard or the screen will cut through the dough, just sorta move the toppings aside. Place an asparagus stalk on either side of each egg well, tips pointing in.

  Set a timer for 2 minutes and place the screen (and pizza) on the pre-heated pizza stone and close the grill lid. After two minutes, remove the screen (with pizza), and crack the 6 eggs into the prepared wells as quickly as you can and return to the grill. I turn on my sear burner at this point too. Set your timer for another 2 minutes. About every 20 seconds rotate the pizza 1/6 rotation so the sear burner doesn't burn your crust. Remove the pizza when the crust has a good char and the eggs are just barely cooked, about 4 minutes total. Cut the pizza into 6 pieces so that each piece has 1 egg and two asparagus stalks. Enjoy.

TTFN
B

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Fresh Pork Breakfast Sausage


We love sausage. This endeavor was initiated due to my girlfriend's allergy to MSG. I wanted her to taste sausage again because she likes it so much and can never have it. I did my own little empirical experiment and read every sausage ingredient list in every food store I went to for about 2 months and every single sausage package had MSG or the lesser known name for MSG of natural salt listed. I did recently find Johnsonville Brats without MSG and we eat a lot of those, but they aren't breakfast sausage. So, where to start? I started with Alton Brown's recipe from the Food Network and made it my own. Here is what I came up with:

Pork Breakfast Sausage
2 lbs fresh, cheap pork (bones not included)
2 tsp kosher salt
1 1/2 tsp black pepper
4 tsp poultry seasoning
1 tbsp brown sugar
1/2 tsp grated nutmeg
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
1/2 tsp garlic powder

  I am sure there are sausage connoisseurs out there that will tell you to use only certain cuts of meat. In fact Alton Brown recommends using pork butt, but I tend toward what is available and economical. In this version we used a Pork Loin Sirloin End Roast (whatever that is). I recently saw a pork shoulder for $1.69 a pound and mammasan thought that might make good sausage, so we'll probably try that at some point. The bottom line is, use the pork you want to use! You want 2 lbs of meat after de-boning. If you do have a bone, make sure you save it for a soup or Gramma and Grampa's sauce. Just throw it in freezer bag and freeze it until you need it.
  Cube the meat and place in a large bowl. Mix all the other ingredients together and sprinkle over the meat cubes. Mix well. Chill for 1 hour. Grind according to you meat grinder's instructions. We don't have a grinder, so we used our food processor. If you use a food processor, don't fill the container more than 1/3 full at a time. I ground all the meat up and put it back in the mixing bowl and gave everything a good stir when it was done.


  We froze our extra sausage. Whenever I freeze meat I try to make sure it is flat so I can stack it and thaw it easier. We just put about 1/2 lb in a freezer bag and got as much air as possible out before sealing it. Then I press it flat and stack it in the freezer. A quick defrost cycle in the microwave first thing in the morning or an over night thaw in the fridge should have it ready for breakfast. Here is the finished product:


TTFN
B