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The World's Best Homemade Sausage!

Always Use The Freshest Spices When Making Sausage!

Use Only the Freshest Spices!

Useful Tips on Making Sausages at Home — from SausageMania.com!

All SausageMania Recipes, except Spanish Chorizo and Portuguese linguica, use pork ground through a 3/16" or 1/4" plate. This gives about the same consistency as standard supermarket hamburger. (The linguica is made with very coarsely-chopped meat ground through a 3/4" plate.) If you do not have your own grinder, some butchers will sell unseasoned ground pork, usually 20-35% fat, ground with the same plate as hamburger. Your butcher may be willing to coarse-grind pork for you, but might require you to order a minimum of 10 pounds or so.

If you have your own grinder, buy pork shoulder roasts, sometimes called "Boston blade roasts," or else use so-called country-style spare ribs, which are merely pork shoulder cut into strips: they are boneless and ready to grind. The shoulder roasts have only about 10% bone by weight. The bone, part of the scapula, is easy to remove with a boning knife.

Don't use a mix that is too lean! Without adequate fat, your sausage will be dry when cooked, and will tend to crumble when cut or sliced.

Use only the freshest spices. Don't reach for that old jar of sage that you last used four years ago! It will have lost most of its flavor.

For stuffing the sausages, you can use your grinder with a sausage funnel attachment. (Don't forget to use the coarsest plate you have, to allow the mix to come through easily!) Or else use one of the hand-cranked piston or press type stuffers. The hand-cranked Chop-Rite fruit and lard press, in continuous production for more than a century, works well, as do the hand-cranked, piston stuffers made by F. Dick (vertical), by Leonardi (horizontal and hard-to-find) or by other manufacturers. A nice variety, including the inexpensive 3-lb cast iron "pump handle" stuffer, can be found at Heinsohn's Country Store in Texas. The indescructible Chop-Rite (formerly Enterprise) stuffers are almost always available for auction on eBay at excellent prices, or may be purchased new directly from Chop-Rite as well as from its many retailers. On eBay, search under "fruit press," "lard press," "sausage stuffer," or "ChopRite."

Use only the finest natural casings — hog for large sausages and sheep for small, breakfast-style links. Poor casings will burst more easily, and will slow down your production significantly, so it's worth spending a little bit extra for premium casings. One excellent source of standard, pre-flushed or tubed casings is the Syracuse Casing Company, whose salt-packed casings can be safely shipped anywhere in the country by U.S. Mail and will last six months if refrigerated (NEVER freeze casings!)

If you are using a grinder to stuff with, make sure the mix is well-chilled. Otherwise, the grinder's feed screw will not "grab" the mix and push it through into the casing, and you'll have to use a wood stomper to force the mix into the grinder's throat. By chilled, we mean just 28-32° F. (Sausage mix will not freeze at 32° F., because of the salt.)

If you are using a piston-type stuffer, the mix temperature is not so critical. In fact, when the mix is fairly warm it will go through the stuffer more easily and you'll get less "back flow" around the "piston ring" on the plunger or pressure plate. When using a piston-type stuffer for small bore casings, add about a pint of water for every 20 lbs of mix. If you don't, the mix will be too "thick," and will require such high pressures to force it out through the narrow stuffing tubethat the "O" ring in the piston will surely dislodge, causing massive backflow of the mix into the cylinder, and making a mess.

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Filling small-bore sheep casings using any kind of home stuffer will take up to five times longer than large-bore hog casings. So it's a good idea to stuff your first-ever sausages into 29-42mm hog casings, or you may get discouraged at the outset. Once you've mastered stuffing large-bore casings, then give 18-22mm sheep casings a try.

If you plan to use tubed casings (a big time-saver), make sure you have straight, not tapered, stuffing tubes, at least eight inches long. You won't be able to get an entire tubed casing up onto a standard five-inch tapered stuffing tube.

SausageMania Recipes call for coarse salt, readily available under the Diamond or Morton labels. Ordinary table salt will do as well, but never use iodized salt, as it will impart a bad taste to your sausage!

 

home | meat grinders | sausage stuffers | sausage casings | e-mail SausageMania | NEW! Sausage Photo Tutorial | sausageMania recipes |more SausageMania recipes | motorize a grinder | tips | links | kippermania | loxmania | NEW! PestoMania | NEW! Even MORE SausageMania Recipes! | NEW! Lox Making Photo Tutorial | NEW! CaviarMania | NEW! Porcini Sausage!