by SGK » Mon Mar 22, 2021 2:49 am
So I took another crack at this. I made a small batch with the following changes:
1. My fat bellies as a percentage of meat content was 12% (versus 21.6% in the original recipe). Pork shoulder was 88% (of meat). This just happened to be the ratio of some meat left over from my last attempt. This was the only change to the original recipe percentages. (Once again, my fat bellies were pork belly retaining all the fat; I merely removed the skin.)
2. Now I have ammophos and so added that in (as per the original recipe %)
3. I mixed all the dry ingredients (incl the bread crumbs) prior to adding to the meat (which was par frozen prior to grinding) and added the dry ingredients slowly to the chilled ground meat while tossing with large spoons. Only towards the very end did I begin to add just a little of the water. Finally, I added the remainder of the water (well more than half the prescribed amount) and mixed everything by hand. I did NOT grind the mix again.
4. I used the largest funnel/spout (?) for my sausage stuffer and pulled the filled casing off steadily rather than using the fed meat to pressure it off. I'm probably not explaining this very well, but it led to much less heavily stuffed casings.
I'm extremely pleased with the results. The sausage had a much more "meatier", firmer texture. The flavour/herb/spice balance remained extremely good. I had no issue with split casings on the couple I barbecued. My "fat test" is to eat them cold (chilled after cooking). Here, again, I was very pleased. The chilled sausage had that nice, slightly wrinkled exterior which was not the case with the first attempt.
Everyone's taste is different but I would suggest one can lower the fat belly percentage by a very good amount. (And perhaps have a slightly healthier end product!) Certainly I don't think it is a good idea to twice grind the meat mixture.
Thanks again!