romanas wrote:Btw, this recipe is very different from the original one from "Medieval German recipes" topic.
Original recipe has high content of beef.
Yes, it is unavoidably different. I am allergic to beef. However, I felt like it was fairly obvious that I wasn't following the 40/40/20 ratio in the original. I will point out that this was a household cookery manuscript, not a trade receipt book, and the meat used depended on availability, so with or without bacon, all beef, all pork, pork and venison...lots of possible variations, at the time. Also, we don't know how much salt or pepper, or what 'some' means in reference to "some sage" and "some marjoram"; but, it is clear from the way the recipe is written that "to taste" is implied.
I do offer an 80/20 pork and bacon version, and a 40/40/20 pork, bison and bacon version that is safe for me to handle, but the bacon adds about $1/lb to the cost to produce, and bison is running about $11/lb, where I live, so I only do those on special order. Unfortunately, when we are working with medieval recipes, there is a lot of approximation because we simply don't know what the execution and seasoning might actually have been, in many cases. In sausages, I adapt for my beef allergy, adjust water and salt and seasonings to taste, just as any medieval cook would have done. I'll suggest you do the same.
BTW, does anybody have an idea what "3 seidlen" of water means?
See some of Ronald E. Zupko's books on medieval weights and measures in Western Europe, France, Italy, and England, to get an idea of how such measures were determined in a given township in a given year. As this is a housebook, the seidl would have been whatever Sabina Welserin's cook was using as that measure. It may have been entirely separate from any civil or commercial standard, referring to a well-used cup in the cook's kitchen. This is rather similar to the use of the term "wine glass" or "tea cup" in later recipes, before a standard volume was established for those references - the volume varied from household to household, and civilly, from town to town.
Translation says to pour 1 quart of water to 10 pounds of meat. But even if we calculate based on extremely heavy Habsburg pound (560 grams), it will mean to pour almost one liter of water to 5,6 kilograms of meat. And this water-to-meat ratio (178 ml to 1 kg of meats) looks far too high...
Any ideas?
That is a lot of water, you're right, though not as much per pound as some modern recipes specify. It makes the mixture quite wet, but it is also much easier to stuff with a sausage horn (that is, actual cut steer horn sections in graduated diameters for stuffing casing). The wetter mixture slides down the casing and packs better, with less trapped air. Also, we don't know what kind of salt meat they may have been using as 'bacon' and the extra water may have been necessary, in part, to moderate and hydrate that salt-cured meat. Since I'm using pork, and cold-smoked, dry-cured bacon when I make the pork/bacon version, and stuffing with a vertical stuffer, I adjust the water to the normal levels I prefer in cases where the meat needs added liquid, which is about an ounce per pound.
Hope this gives you some insights on my approach. Welcome to the forum.