Hal380 wrote:Hello All;
Just joined and this is my first post.
I have made Italian sweet sausage with success, so I tried liverwurst. I had a good recipe and followed it closely, but the results were terrible. When I ground the pork it was very moist, almost liquid. I stuffed it in the I stuffed it in the muslin and simmered it for the required time and then chilled it overnight in ice water. When I tried it the texture was very granular. Liverwurst should be very smooth, but this was very crumbled.
Any Ideas what I did wrong?
Thanks in advance
Hal
Welcome, Hal. I'd look at the basics, first. Here are some things to check.
Meat should be thoroughly chilled to the point of being stiff, without being frozen through, about 32-36°F, when it goes through the grinder. If possible, it should be kept between 32°F and 38°F throughout processing. Cold meat cuts cleanly, and does not yield much liquid at all. If the meat is not chilled sufficiently, the grinder knives may mash the meat instead of cutting it cleanly, causing the meat to yield much of its liquid and become dry and granular when cooked. This is particularly true of liver, which is a very delicate structure. If the fat is not sufficiently chilled, it will smear and 'break', causing the fat to lose structure and drain away when cooked, leaving the cooked sausage dry and bland, with a granular texture (almost like styrofoam beads
).
Running meat through a grinder causes the grinder and the meat to heat up. The smaller the holes in the grinder plate, the more the meat will heat as it gets forced through the small holes. For this reason, all the parts of your grinder that come in contact with the meat should be thoroughly chilled when grinding starts. This includes the hopper, feedscrew housing and feedscrew, knives, grinder plate, and retention ring.
Also, meat will not grind cleanly if the grinder is not properly assembled. The two most common mistakes people make are putting the knives in backwards (whether from inattention or inexperience, it happens), and failing to tighten the retention ring, sufficiently. People usually know right away that something is wrong if the knives are reversed. The meat feeding through the grinder plate is mashed and the sound of the meat being ground is definitely not the way it sounds when the knives are properly flush against the plate. To cut cleanly, the knives must press firmly and evenly against the plate. If the retention ring is not tight enough so that it will not loosen during grinding, the knives and plate may not be seated properly, which allows meat and sinew to get between the knives and the plate, resulting in mashed meat.
If the liver, meat, fat and grinder were chilled properly, and the grinder was properly assembled, then I'd start looking elsewhere for the poor quality of the finished liverwurst. Perhaps the meat simmered at too high a temperature. Perhaps the recipe called for too long a cooking time. Or perhaps it was the quality of the meat, itself, and you really did have some PSE meat.
ETA: oops. Zulululu and I appear to have been responding at the same time. Sorry for repeating.