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Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Mon Jul 03, 2017 1:56 pm
by NCPaul
Chicken Bog Sausage
Where ever you find chicken and rice, you’ll find a version of this. Most of these will be simple affairs with a light hand with the spices to let the mild ingredients speak for themselves. I wanted to capture the essence of this dish in an encased form. Here are a couple of model recipes I looked at:
http://ansonmills.com/recipes/405?recipes_by=grain
http://achefslifeseries.com/recipes/21
To get the rice to be present, I decided to ratio the chicken at two parts to one part of rice. I also thought I could enhance the chicken taste by cooking the rice in chicken stock. For seasoning I settled on salt and white pepper with a little powdered bay leaf and fresh chopped parsley and chives.

Chicken thigh meat and fat 800 g
(This came from six leg quarters; the drumsticks, skin and bones were used to make broth)
Cooked rice 400 g
(Using 200 g, 1 cup rice cooked in 2 cups broth will give you what you need plus lunch :D )
Salt 16.6 g
White pepper 2.4 g
Powdered bay leaf 2.4 g
Chopped chives 4 g (1 T)
Chopped parsley 6 g (1 T)
Pass the chicken (nearly frozen) through a course plate along with half of the cooked rice (this was done for texture reasons). Blend in the balance of the rice along with the spices. Stuff into sheep casing. These are prone to bursting with the high level of filler so cook gently, or consider poaching then browning, or skip the casing altogether and form into patties.
Rice used
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Ratio
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Good bind
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Stuffed and linked
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Patty option
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Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Tue Jul 04, 2017 9:11 am
by RodinBangkok
I've used roasted rice powder in chicken sausages before with some success you may want to give it a try.

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Wed Jul 05, 2017 1:37 pm
by NCPaul
That sounds like a larb sausage; does the rice maintain it's texture?

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Thu Jul 06, 2017 12:29 pm
by RodinBangkok
The powder is more about flavor in a wet recipe like sausage, as it will absorb moisture and thus not be crunchy but still retain its toasted flavor. It may change the water content in your formulation as it will absorb some so if you try it experiment a bit with water content. But yes its used for texturing in salads in Asian recipes.

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Sun May 13, 2018 12:23 pm
by NCPaul
I've modified this sausage slightly and have found that I like them best uncased and made into patties. When fried this way they form a crunchy thin crust. A larger sized patty can be used to make a chicken sandwich with a bit of lettuce and some pickles.

Chicken meat and fat from 10 chicken thighs 1500 g 3 # 5 oz.
Cooked rice (1 c cooked in 2 c chicken stock) 600 g
Morton kosher salt 27 g 1 T and 1 t
Finely ground white pepper 4.2 g 2 t
Powdered bay leaf 4.2 g 1 ½ t
Chopped fresh parsley 7 g 2 T
Chopped fresh chives 8 g 2 T

Spread the cubed chicken meat on a tray and partially freeze. Mix the chicken with half of the cooked rice, the salt and spices. Grind through a course plate if using a sausage grinder or process in small batches if using a food processor. Mix sausage meat with the remaining rice and herbs until uniform. Shape into 2.5 oz. (70 g) patties or into 5 oz. (140 g) bun size patty or stuff into sheep casings. Yield: 4.5 #, or 29 sausage patties at 2.5 oz.
Serving size 5 oz.
Calories 144
Fat 9.4 g
Cholesterol 87 mg
Sodium 858 mg
Protein 20.8 g

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Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Mon May 14, 2018 7:13 am
by DanMcG
sounds good, looks even better! Paul, any idea on the carb count?

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2018 3:35 am
by dward51
For the patty recipe just above, by my math using some carb amounts for 100g of rice of various types I found via google....

White long grain rice has 28g per 100g (cooked) so if the recipe calls for 600g cooked rice, that is 168g total. With 29 of the 2.5 oz patties, that works out to be 5.79 per patty, or 11.59 per 5 oz serving by my math.

Carbs drop to 23g per 100g (cooked) for brown long grain rice, or 9.52g carbs per 5 oz serving.

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2018 9:47 pm
by NCPaul
Thanks for adding that analysis. :D

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Thu Nov 08, 2018 11:56 am
by texta
just made some of these today and the test pattie tastes great .i could not get fresh herbs so i had to use dried chives and parsley which made working out the quantity a bit of a guess , i used 2.3 kg of chicken breasts skin on , then roughly one a half times the salt and pepper just 1 cup rice cooked in 2 cups of water with 2 teaspoons of gluten free chicken stock powder.
johno

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Sat Nov 10, 2018 1:29 pm
by NCPaul
If you don't have fresh chives, you can sub in the tops of green onions.

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Sun Nov 11, 2018 4:07 pm
by wheels
I guess it would make a good chicken burger? I've been looking for one that isn't coated in breadcrumbs and am hoping that this will fit the bill?

Phil

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Sun Nov 11, 2018 11:45 pm
by NCPaul
You bet. :D

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2018 12:20 am
by wheels
Many thanks.

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2020 5:16 pm
by wheels
NCPaul

Powdered Bay Leaf? It's not something we'd normally use over here. Do you just grind the dried bay leaves?

Phil

Re: Chicken Bog Sausage

PostPosted: Fri Jul 03, 2020 9:47 pm
by NCPaul
You could try to grind a leaf to a powder but it's hard to do. I would put a leaf into the rice and stock as it cooks then extract it at the end. A fresh bay leaf would work even better. I have a small bay laurel tree potted in my backyard. Powdered bay is often used in fried chicken recipes to season the coating.