by larry » Mon Dec 19, 2011 7:13 pm
Cooking chorizos are usually partially cooked in the manufacture. The dry cured variety are generally just sliced and eaten, not used in cooking, as you found out. I have made chorizo from a "fresh" sausage recipe, and then smoked them in a barrel smoker left slightly open for around an hour. This fully cooked them, but not enough to melt the fat out of them. I (foolishly) didn't use any curing salts, but they didn't spend a lot of time in the danger zone for developing bacteria. I don't have the recipe now, but as I recall, I used pork and some trimmed fat I had, ground coarsely, and added pimenton, salt and ground chipotle chiles. I used hot pimenton, which was quite hot, and the chipotle was also quite hot. The result was very spicy chipotle, but it worked beautifully for cooking, leaching out the spice and fat in paellas and soups. If I make it again, I will add some cure #1, which will make the smoking process safer. I should note that these sausages don't keep forever. I used what I could, and then vacuum packed and froze the rest.