Well, the OH grilled the aforementioned sausages for breakfast to a nice golden brown colour. They were served with hot toast and 'Branston' brand baked beans, they looked the part and gave off a good aroma. They tasted very good indeed, but I must admit they seemed 'spicy' and gave off some heat to the throat - which I liked. The white pepper didn't appear too high in quantity so I'm wondering if the raised amount of salt accentuated the spices ? I remember recently a chef saying that if you put pepper into boiling water you won't be able to taste anything, yet if you put it into salted water, then it will taste of pepper. Maybe substitute half black pepper for the white but keep it at the original amount. Re' the Nutmeg, I did think it would dominate the flavour, so that's why I substituted half the amount with Mace. I think Mace has a more 'refined' flavour and compliments other spices. Then again, maybe I should have tried the original recipe in its entirety as a base to build on.
I like adding scalded rice into the mix rather than just rusk and water as in my opinion it gives a nicer texture.
Overall, a very decent flavoured sausage and one that would go well with a 'full English' (or even Irish). Next time, I'll have them with mashed potato (Champ style) and cabbage to carry on with the Irish theme - oh, and maybe a bottle of stout
Ste.
"Success is going from failure to failure without a loss of enthusiasm." - Sir Winston Churchill