by Paul Kribs » Fri Apr 29, 2005 11:41 am
Welcome asilverfish,
I am also relatively new to sausage making but have made some lamb ones, which turned out very nicely. Even after freezing they are superb.
The intention was to make a lamb sausage with the subtle taste of both rosemary and mint without over-powering the lamb. I did evaluate quite a few recipes on the web to see how much of certain ingredients are used in different mixes, just to get a general idea. I will give the recipe here.
I used a whole leg of lamb and the top half of a shoulder, the fatty part up by the neck.
This yielded 5 lbs 3 ozs of meat and fat.
I added 3 heaped teaspoons of crushed dried rosemary,
4 heaped teaspoons of dried mint,
1 flat teaspoon of dried sage,
1 flat teaspoon of dried thyme,
2 heaped teaspoons of crushed mixed peppercorns,
2 tablespoons of salt,
1/2 a teaspoon of powdered mace,
12 ozs of rusk.
I added cold water to bring the mix a bit looser, about 1 1/4 pints.
I was advised by Oddley that my rusk content was slightly too high at 14% and should have been somewhere between 5% - 10%, with the rusk to water content being 1 part rusk to 1 1/2 parts water. However I would add that they have turned out very well despite having an extra bit of rusk. The mint flavour is more prominent than the rosemary and compliments the lamb well, which was how I wanted it.. more by luck than judgement I must add.
Obviously they turned out to be rather expensive sausages by using a leg of lamb along with the half shoulder, but I eat them in the knowledge that I can thoroughly enjoy them cos there's no bone or cartilage to surprise me because I boned it carefully myself.
Haven't tried making a beef sausage yet but will do in the very near future. I don't know if you could get away with not using any pork product as you need fat in the mix. There are people much more experienced than me on this forum and no doubt they will advise you accordingly.
Regards Paul Kribs