gsevelle wrote:grisell wrote:dorsets21 wrote:beware the ghost as it has all round burn from start to finish and some ,i would start with 8g per 10# of meat and see how that go,s that will be hot not for the faint hearted
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8 grams per 10 pounds?
That's like 0.2%. I doubt that I would even feel that it's there.
I have experimented a little with hot sausages. My last batch contained 10% fresh habañero with seeds and pulp plus 5% extra hot dried chili pepper and harissa paste, all immersed in alcohol to extract as much capsaicin as possible. I'm aware that Jolokia chili is roughly three times hotter than habañero, but it's still around 20 times more hotness than in your suggestion.
My sausages were really hot, that's for sure, but edible by everyone who tried them, and in Sweden we are usually not very used to hot food. My wife gulfed them down and so did I. Other people thought they were really intensely hot, but got used to them after the first few bites. No one left any on their plate. They were very popular.
The recipe is here
http://forum.sausagemaking.org/viewtopi ... c&start=21You can read the whole thread if you like, gsevelle.
Oh this is getting really fun. I did not realize that I would start an international event by posting a question on this forum but I find it very interesting to be able to exchange with others around the world.
OK so here is the challange. Based on what I've read and found only one person has used this in their sausage. I'd like to suggest to those interested that we each use our hot sausage recipe, substitute or add some quantity of ghost pepper (note the quantity and type) and give them a try. I'm going to use beef as the other person who really likes hot does not eat prok. Post your recipie and review your sausage.
For those in the US you can get the powdered ghost pepper from Firehouse pantry. For those of you in the UK and other EU countries you will need to find either an Indian grocery or other on-line supplier that will ship to you.
OK so here goes. I made this today and they turned out great. Not too hot but with a real good kick.
California Hot Beef Sausage
Meat
5 lbs beef (ground through fine plate)
1 lb beef trimmings (ground through fine plate)
Spice mix
1 Tbs Garlic powder
1Tbs Onion powder
2 Tbs Smoked Paprika
1 tps Ground sage
1 tps Cayenne Pepper
1 tps Double fine ground Mustard
1 tps Ground chipotle pepper
2 tps Ground ghost pepper
Cure and Binder
2 Tbs Insta Cure 1 (Prague Powder 1)
1 cup Soy Protein concentrate
1 cup ice water
Directions
Mix spices in dry noncorrosive container and set aside.
Grind meat and fat through fine grind plate of your meat grinder, mix fat and meat thoroughly. In batches run meat through food processor to create a emulsified mixture.
In large food pan using hands mix meat, spice mix (I only used 2/3 of the mix for the 6 lbs of meat) Insta Cure, Soy Protein concentrate and ice water.
Extrude into casing of your choice.
Smoke with light smoke at a temp between 150°F - 200°F until your sausage reaches 165°F (°74C) Remove sausage and place in ice bath. I start my smoker cold and let the water and chips warm up this provides a good ramp up as my smoker reaches 200°F and does not shock cook the meat.
Sausage is completely cooked and can be eaten cold or reheated on the grill on in a skillet.