SAUSAGE PHOTO GALLERY (Without Original Recipes)
Canadian Kabanosy
I'm continuing to use up my Canada Goose breasts, so yesterday I made some "Canadian Kabanosy". As many of you probably noticed, I'm a bit pedantic about naming something inappropriately, so at first I thought the name would cross the line. Traditional Kabanosy were made with especially bred and fattened pigs in Eastern Poland known as "kabanki". But today, any narrow diameter, semi-dry sausage made in Poland is called Kabanosy. You can find them made with wild boar, chicken, turkey, domestic goose, and even salmon! Ergo Canadian Kabanosy!
Again, I had a lot of work with preparing the breasts. Trimming the fat, bloody parts and searching for buckshot. I threw out about 20% of what is pictured below. I managed to find four pellets, three in the breasts and one more after the meat went through the grinder. I will be warning everyone to chew these slowly!
I added 50% of fatty pork shoulder and used the traditional Kabanosy seasonings: salt, pepper, nutmeg, caraway and the optional garlic. Stuffed into 22mm collagen and smoked with Traeger brand cherry pellets. They turned out excellent, absolutely no gamey flavours, good texture and not overdone. The sausages need a few days of drying and that should improve the flavour even more. Will provide good energy on my hiking excursions.
Again, I had a lot of work with preparing the breasts. Trimming the fat, bloody parts and searching for buckshot. I threw out about 20% of what is pictured below. I managed to find four pellets, three in the breasts and one more after the meat went through the grinder. I will be warning everyone to chew these slowly!
I added 50% of fatty pork shoulder and used the traditional Kabanosy seasonings: salt, pepper, nutmeg, caraway and the optional garlic. Stuffed into 22mm collagen and smoked with Traeger brand cherry pellets. They turned out excellent, absolutely no gamey flavours, good texture and not overdone. The sausages need a few days of drying and that should improve the flavour even more. Will provide good energy on my hiking excursions.
- Chuckwagon
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Hey Red, That is delicious-looking bird-osky! Wow, what a color. But, I'm a little confused. Is the recipe from Poli's outfit or is that your own recipe?
Yikes, that's good-lookin' stuff.
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
Yikes, that's good-lookin' stuff.
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it probably needs more time on the grill!
- Chuckwagon
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Well you've sure got the technique down. I've never seen better lookin' kabanosy. You'd better watch out for atcNick though... he'll be camping on your porch (he goes nuts over this stuff).
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it probably needs more time on the grill!
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My 1st Pepperoni is ready, used Marianski's recipe with adding garlic & marjoram to it and just used dextrose as sweetener and stuffed them in beef middles.
http://[/img]
sliced them in half and vacuum packed them
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on the left the sliced pepperoni and on the right my 2nd salametti cacciatore which I will dry out a bit longer; had a 45% weight reduction on the pepperoni and taste and look great.
Just got my new ph reader in so wasn't able to use it from the start and had a couple temperature issues, seems like every so often the temp controller is kicking out and the fridge is getting in the mid to high 60's. Well my wife and I had a good taste and we are fine.
Cheers,
John
http://[/img]
sliced them in half and vacuum packed them
[/img]
on the left the sliced pepperoni and on the right my 2nd salametti cacciatore which I will dry out a bit longer; had a 45% weight reduction on the pepperoni and taste and look great.
Just got my new ph reader in so wasn't able to use it from the start and had a couple temperature issues, seems like every so often the temp controller is kicking out and the fridge is getting in the mid to high 60's. Well my wife and I had a good taste and we are fine.
Cheers,
John
- Chuckwagon
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Thanks CW,Chuckwagon wrote:John, it looks amazing! Well done pard. Tell me how the texture is. It sounds like the flavor is just right.
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
The texture is excellent, vacuum sealed them all and froze some. Put my sausage making on hold, as I am finishing drywalling the basement and of course hope to finish in time to make another couple of batches before the summer.
Cheers,
John
- Chuckwagon
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Here's a quick shot of my latest batch of "Texas Smokey Hot Links"<insert link to PhotoBucket here> with the Easter Duck shown for size comparison. (As you know, the Easter Duck comes down the chimney each Easter and brings sausages to all good little girls' and boys' granddaddies.)
<can't get the picture from phone to computer to Photobucket. Fighting a computer virus on one machine and Windows 8 on another. Aaarrrggghhh!!!>
The recipe ( http://wedlinydomowe.pl/en/viewtopic.ph ... +hot+links ) was prepared by buying a pound of ground beef, then scaling the recipe. I keep 80/20 ground pork butt frozen in one-kilo bags, so I can whip up some sausage on short notice. In this case, I needed 880 grams out of the kilo, so I mixed up the rest with a scaled amount of chorizo spicing and had it for breakfast the next few days.
But enough of that. I let the mix season overnight, then got out my trusty "Ross-n-Russ Ram Rod" stuffer. (Search the website, starting at http://wedlinydomowe.pl/en/viewtopic.ph ... ght=ramrod for how to build it.) From initial sanitization, through loading and stuffing, to final cleanup took about an hour and twenty minutes. This amount of sausage is ideal for the "ramrod," but at a little over 3 pounds, isn't enough to justify getting out a vertical stuffer or (shudder) a horn stuffer.
There is always a little left over, which in my case I stuck into a snack-size plastic bag. No sense loading another casing, just to use less than a foot of it. If you had the photo, you would see the duck eying the bag suspiciously. Now you know why.
To sum up, I make small batches of sausage almost exclusively. Freezing mince in one-kilo lots makes trying a new recipe (or making an old one) quick and easy, because the grinding has already been done. Thaw, mix with spices, refrigerate overnight, then stuff. The "ram rod" approach to stuffing uses little time and few resources, and its PVC parts are dishwasher safe.
...great way to try all sorts of recipes, quickly and easily. Try it. You'll be happier'n an Easter Duck.
<can't get the picture from phone to computer to Photobucket. Fighting a computer virus on one machine and Windows 8 on another. Aaarrrggghhh!!!>
The recipe ( http://wedlinydomowe.pl/en/viewtopic.ph ... +hot+links ) was prepared by buying a pound of ground beef, then scaling the recipe. I keep 80/20 ground pork butt frozen in one-kilo bags, so I can whip up some sausage on short notice. In this case, I needed 880 grams out of the kilo, so I mixed up the rest with a scaled amount of chorizo spicing and had it for breakfast the next few days.
But enough of that. I let the mix season overnight, then got out my trusty "Ross-n-Russ Ram Rod" stuffer. (Search the website, starting at http://wedlinydomowe.pl/en/viewtopic.ph ... ght=ramrod for how to build it.) From initial sanitization, through loading and stuffing, to final cleanup took about an hour and twenty minutes. This amount of sausage is ideal for the "ramrod," but at a little over 3 pounds, isn't enough to justify getting out a vertical stuffer or (shudder) a horn stuffer.
There is always a little left over, which in my case I stuck into a snack-size plastic bag. No sense loading another casing, just to use less than a foot of it. If you had the photo, you would see the duck eying the bag suspiciously. Now you know why.
To sum up, I make small batches of sausage almost exclusively. Freezing mince in one-kilo lots makes trying a new recipe (or making an old one) quick and easy, because the grinding has already been done. Thaw, mix with spices, refrigerate overnight, then stuff. The "ram rod" approach to stuffing uses little time and few resources, and its PVC parts are dishwasher safe.
...great way to try all sorts of recipes, quickly and easily. Try it. You'll be happier'n an Easter Duck.
Experience - the ability to instantly recognize a mistake when you make it again.
Well, here's the photo. (Sorry about that.)<can't get the picture from phone to computer to Photobucket. Fighting a computer virus on one machine and Windows 8 on another. Aaarrrggghhh!!!>
The sausage turned out great, by the way. (You can see the little guy salivating.)There is always a little left over, which in my case I stuck into a snack-size plastic bag. No sense loading another casing, just to use less than a foot of it. ....... [you can] see the duck eying the bag suspiciously. Now you know why.
Duk
Experience - the ability to instantly recognize a mistake when you make it again.
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