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Swedish Potato Sausage

PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2012 3:43 pm
by Dingo
Here is a Swedish Potato Sausage recipe I made over the weekend...

Pork
Beef
Potatoes
The recipe calls for 1:1:1 ratio for the above, however it also stated that this wasn't critical. I used (because it is what I had);

2.7lbs x Pork Shoulder
2lbs x Elk Venison
1.5lbs x Potatoes
40g x Kosher Salt
10g x Black Pepper
3.5g x Allspice
50g x Granulated Onion
200ml x White Wine
30g x Bread Crumbs

Grind meat & potatoes through 3/8" plate
Mix and bind spice with meat
Stuff into hog casings

The original recipes states that they can be fried, baked or boiled...I grilled them. Grill very slowly so that the raw potato cooks.

Ingredients ready to roll;
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Stuffed;
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Linked;
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Drying;
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All in all it is a very tasty sausage. Next batch I will poach to see what that does to the texture. Enjoy :D

PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2012 4:09 pm
by salumi512
That sounds like a really good recipe. I wonder how parboiling the potatoes for a few minutes would do before putting them in the grinder, as far as ensuring they are cooked when the meat is done.

I'll give this recipe a try for sure.

Update

PostPosted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 2:21 pm
by Dingo
I poached a couple last night.....much better texture. The "al-dente" potato pieces are cooked through. Really nice flavor. Mental note to self; reduce onion by 1/3

PostPosted: Thu Mar 15, 2012 10:32 am
by grisell
They look really nice! :D

I've consulted my book Svensk Kokkonst (Swedish Cookery) from 1918, and I can give a few comments if you are interested in a more traditional product. Potato sausages are common in traditional Swedish cooking and there are many recipes from different provinces, but some features are common to most of them.


* Skip the wine. I've never seen a Swedish traditional recipe that conatins wine, simply because we can't grow vine here and imported wine has always been very expensive. Use milk or a mixture of milk and cream instead.

* Skip the rusk. Rusk is not used in Swedish sausages. A common filler in Sweden on the other hand is parboiled barley groats, but here you already have the potatoes.

* Skip the onion powder too. Same here, never heard of it.

* Black pepper was uncommon in Sweden until some 50 years ago. White pepper is more traditional.

* Elk in sausage? I haven't seen any such recipe, but there is little doubt that it exists, since we have a lot of them here. Why not?

* Boil the potatoes.


According to the book, this is an old (old already in 1918) Swedish sausage spice mix:

16 g thyme
10 g marjoram
2 bay leaves
5 g rosemary
10 g white pepper
3 g cayenne pepper
8 g cloves

Grind finely. Use about 5 grams of mix per kilo sausage. Swedish sausages are always discretely seasoned. The book advises strongly against using nutmeg in sausages.

PostPosted: Thu Mar 15, 2012 4:53 pm
by vagreys
grisell wrote:...* Elk in sausage? I haven't seen any such recipe, but there is little doubt that it exists, since we have a lot of them here. Why not?...

FYI, André. The Swedish elk (Alces alces), is what we typically call a moose in the US and Canada. I'm almost certain that the elk Dingo added to his sausage is another animal, entirely, Cervus canadensis. Not that it matters, but it would be closer to adding venison, than Swedish elk. There are sausages over here that call for moose, so why not, indeed?

(I learned this from the Swedish girl who donated a kidney to someone else on my behalf so I would go to the top of the transplant list.)

PostPosted: Thu Mar 15, 2012 7:02 pm
by Dingo
Thanks for the tips Grisell. :)

I did use the original recipe fairly loosely...it called for water...i used wine...it did call for white pepper...didn't have any so used black...I used rusk as I was concerned with the moisture content in the mixture with the wine and ground raw potatoes.

I will try the traditional approach and spice mix next time.

PostPosted: Sun Mar 18, 2012 11:27 pm
by grisell
vagreys wrote:
grisell wrote:...* Elk in sausage? I haven't seen any such recipe, but there is little doubt that it exists, since we have a lot of them here. Why not?...

FYI, André. The Swedish elk (Alces alces), is what we typically call a moose in the US and Canada. I'm almost certain that the elk Dingo added to his sausage is another animal, entirely, Cervus canadensis. Not that it matters, but it would be closer to adding venison, than Swedish elk. There are sausages over here that call for moose, so why not, indeed?

(I learned this from the Swedish girl who donated a kidney to someone else on my behalf so I would go to the top of the transplant list.)

Thanks for the information. Moose meat is very expensive here. I don't know why, since we kill tens of thousands of them every Autumn.
Anyway, I don't care much for it. It's very lean and not worth the price. Wild boar is much better IMO if we're talking game.

Re: Swedish Potato Sausage

PostPosted: Thu Feb 21, 2013 11:55 pm
by JerBear
A co-worker is coming over to learn how to make sausage this weekend and has requested Swedish Potato Sausage. I've never made it before and I've found three versions, however, not a single one specify's what kind of potato to use.... waxy or starchy. I'm leaning towards starchy myself....thoughts?

Re: Swedish Potato Sausage

PostPosted: Fri Feb 22, 2013 9:22 am
by grisell
I don't think it matters. In Swedish recipes, we usually don't distinguish between the two varieties.

Re: Swedish Potato Sausage

PostPosted: Wed Nov 27, 2013 8:11 am
by JerBear
Thinking on one of the prior statements that Swedish sausages tend to be "discreetly" seasoned.... I made this sausage this past weekend (http://lpoli.50webs.com/index_files/Potato-Scandinavian.pdf) and found it to be truly underwhelming. It wasn't a bad recipe but there just wasn't much flavor there. The only modification I made to the recipe was that I used all pork, however, on batch #2 tomorrow I'm going to revert to the 'proper' amount of beef but I'm also thinking about increasing the allspice, pepper and salt.

Most of sausages contain about 1.75% salt based on the weight of the meat and Len Poli's version has the same percentage but where I get stuck is that doesn't leave any seasoning for the potato and onion. I was thinking about calculating somewhere around 1.5% of salt for the potato/onion as well as potentially cooking the onions a bit before grinding them (I hate the flavor of raw refrigerated onion)....

thoughts?

Re: Swedish Potato Sausage

PostPosted: Wed Nov 27, 2013 1:43 pm
by Dingo
Hi Jerbear i agree with you on the onion point..that;s why i tend to use dried granulated garlic. Pretty readily available here in the US. Next time i make this one, i think i'll try a white wine reduction with onion, garlic and maybe some cilantro to impart more flavor.

Re: Swedish Potato Sausage

PostPosted: Mon Dec 02, 2013 9:22 pm
by JerBear
This time 'round I used a pork/beef mixture about 1.5/1, pre-sauteed the onions in a smidge of butter just until translucent before cooling to fridge temp and doubled the allspice and pepper. Very tasty but a little too mild for my preferences. Once issue I did have is the sausages turned purple presumably from the oxidation of the potato... has anyone experienced this and if so did you use anything to inhibit oxidation such as ascorbic acid or encapsulated citric acid?

Re: Swedish Potato Sausage

PostPosted: Thu Dec 05, 2013 3:26 am
by Dingo
They turned purple? :shock:

Maybe they listened to to much Prince :lol:

Re: Swedish Potato Sausage

PostPosted: Thu Dec 05, 2013 3:44 am
by JerBear
not quite prince purple, but close.... ;)