Saturday, February 14, 2009

Coriander Sausage

It's been a while since my friend Scott (different friend from the Kimchee Scott) and I last made sausage from the Mule Deer that I brought back from Colorado, so I figured it was time again. The Venison sausage came out on the dry side (despite liberal additions of Pork Fat) so this time I decided to follow a known recipe more closely. I chose one of Rytek Kutas's from his book "Great Sausage Recipes and Meat Curing" Now, I'm not really a fan of Rytek's; mainly because he recommends to not-culture fermented sausages and IMHO that is a recipe for disease. I simply chose his recipes to check the ratios in my ingredients. I started with about 20% more meat than his recipe calls for, so I bumped up his ingredients by about 20%. Since he uses household measure, this was hard to figure out until I decided to use the Blade scale that I bought for wine making to weigh most of his measures and then increase by ±20%. I would then fry some up and taste it so I could make any adjustments before stuffing. What I found was that following Rytek's recipe produced an incredibly boring sausage; so I pulled an Emiril and bumped it up a notch. Here's what I ended up with:
12.37lbspork shoulder but roast bone in.
1 entire bulb as big as my 5 year old's fistgarlic
17gFennel seed. The fennel (or Anise seed in a pinch) is what makes an Italian sausage Italian.
20gCaraway seed (supplements the fennel)
8.1gBlack pepper, coarse ground)
1 TblPeppercorns, multi-coloured (for texture)
25gRed pepper flakes, crushed
2 TblCorn sugar. In a fermented sausage the sugar would serve as food for the bio that you add; in a fresh sausage like this one it's to help bind the meat so it stays relatively firm.
6.3gCoriander, ground
2.3gCoriander seed, whole (for texture)
5 "throws"
(a throw is the precision measurement where the wife pours some in her hand then dumps it in)
Kosher salt. Kosher salt is not iodized. You don't want to cook with iodine!
30gWhite onion
106gRed onion
Splash2004 Esprit de Beaucastel
2.5 cupsWater
Several feet32-35mm Hog casing

I used the Meat grinder attachment on my wife's KitchenAid Mixer to grind the meat, onions and garlic. I used the large grinding plate as I wanted texture to my sausage.

I used a mortar and pestle to lightly crack the whole seed spices (peppercorns, coriander, carraway, and fennel). I prefer using a molcajete to a traditional ceramic mortar as the volcanic stone in the molcajete gives a texture to grind against.

Mix all ingredients thoroughly, then take a tablespoon full of what you got and fry it up to taste if it's going to be OK. If not, then adjust the spices to taste

Stuff and link.

Enjoy!
MRA

Update 15-Feb-09 Fried some up for breakfast. Next time I'll go lighter on the corriander.
Update 16-Feb-09 It needs more heat. More pepper flakes or perhaps chili powder next go

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