by Chuckwagon » Sat Jan 30, 2010 3:34 am
Hi Snags,
Here is a favorite suggested by a chef at a Tech College in Cincinatti, Ohio. People seem to really go for this stuff. I'm sure the original contained veal rather than milk-soaked pork. Ranchers here have most always shunned veal, protesting the treatment of calves to harvest it. Also, notice that it has no garlic. Heck, I normally don't even speak to people who don't use garlic! Nevertheless, you might give it a try.
“Sidewinder’s Sausage”
(Ohmygosh! We Forgot The Garlic!)
5 lbs. pork butt
5 lbs. lean pork (milk-soaked overnight, discard milk)
1-1/2 cups dry white wine (not fruity)
1-1/2 Tblspns. salt
1-1/2 Tblspns. parsley (finely minced)
1 Tblspn. freshly ground black pepper
1 Tblspn. powdered dextrose
1 tspn. mace (ground)
1 tspn. coriander (ground)
1 tspn. nutmeg (ground)
Trim the fat from all the pork and freeze it. Grind the frozen fat through a 3/8” plate and place it back into the freezer. Cut the meat into inch chunks ready for mincing and refrigerate it, but soak the lean pork in whole milk, covered overnight in the fridge. Next day, discard the milk and grind the pork with the pork butt using a 3/8” plate. Mix the remaining ingredients into the wine and add the blend to the meat. Mix the meat until it becomes a sticky meat paste. Adjust the moisture if necessary by adding water. Finally, fold the frozen fat into the mixture, distribute it with a paddle, then stuff the sausage into 38 mm hog casings. Refrigerate sausages overnight to develop flavor. Best grilled!
Note: To promote even browning on the grill, place the sausages in very hot water ten minutes before they go on the grill.
Best wishes, Chuckwagon
If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and walks like a duck, it probably needs a little more time on the grill.