Hi
People with a good memory (
) may remember me asking this question.
Ianinfrance wrote:Hi,
Oh.. and I also bought a packet of Franco's favourite Thai mix, only to find that there are no instructions for use. So, if anyone had used it, could you give me a hint. An idea of how you use them once made would be nice too.
Well, a PM and email later, I got a very nice apologetic email from Steph, with instructions and a suggested recipe. If anyone else is in my shoes and got the packet without the instructions, here they are.
Chiang mai Thai Seasoning. 250g
Usage rate 2.5 % i.e. 25 grammes of seasoning per kilo of meat/rusk.
Recipe suggestion:
750 grammes pork (shoulder is ideal)
100 grammes rusk.
150 grammes water.
25 grammes Chiang mai thai seasoning.
1. Mix pork, water and seasoning.
2. Mince.
3. Add rusk to mix.
4. Mince again.
5. Stuff into natural or collagen casings.
As you can imagine, I was curious, partly to try it out and partly to put into practice what I've been reading here. So I bought 500 gms of fairly lean belly, and 500 gms of throat, which is very fatty, cut them into smallish cubes and stuffed the lot in the freezer for half an hour.
While I was waiting, I weighed out the mix, assembled the mincer and so on. When they came out, I mixed them up with the seasoning, (thought I'd try without rusk or water) and then passed them through the Kenwood with mincer attachment twice on fine, before popping back in the fridge to ripen. As there was only a kilo, I couldn't be fagged to stuff them, and we had them as "sausagemeat patties", as I've frequently had them in the USA.
Very interesting. As before the seasoning was very much to my taste. The texture, having been minced twice very cold, was excellent, though not as juicy as cased sausages would have been. Quite a lot of the fat ran out, which again wouldn't have happened if cases/with rusk.
Wonderful flavouring mix, which I'd be happy to recommend. A nice little bite of chilli, with very thai flavours. Thanks to Steph for sending me the recipe.