Making
sausage at The Awaiting Table in Lecce
Making
fresh sausage is usually one of the high points of the week.
Not only is it a lot of fun, but it’s sobering when
you think of how much more your average person knew about
food preparation, even say, only three generations back.
Nearly all of us have not-so-distant relatives that used
to make fresh sausage, every autumn, right after the pig
reached the point when he wasn’t going to get any fatter.
One
could also argue that making sausages appears to be hard-wired
into all of us, like the fear of snakes or a childhood fondness
for sweet: there aren’t too many cultures in the world
that don’t produce their own form of sausage, nor many
cultures that haven’t been doing it since long before
anyone started to write down such things.
Here
at the school in Lecce , we all pitch in and bang out enough
for 20 in less than half
an hour: it actually takes us longer to build the charcoal
fire. We have several recipes and we are always on the look-out
for new, traditional ones from the Salento, but the true
is that we always seem to come back to the same one, time
and time again. To call these ‘popular’ is
an understatement: local dinner guests often shamelessly
solicit invitations weeks in advance.
Key
concepts in the making of fresh sausage (our classic recipe follows)
|
"Specialising
in small, hands-on classes based on personalized
instruction and individual attention." |
|
| Fat
is good. Fat works. Can you use lean turkey meat? No you may
not. Grilling liberates a lot of fat, so don’t assume that just
because it goes into the sausage that it’s going to go into
you. Make them good and only have one or two. It’s not an
everyday food, which is just another way of saying, Have the best
you possible can, just eat them less often (which is probably a
good working definition between a ‘gourmand’ and a ‘glutton’ anyway). |
Salt.
The word ‘sausage’ actually comes from the word for ‘salt’ (as
does ‘salad’, ‘salary’, ‘salumi’ and ‘salami’).
Not only does the mineral amplify existing flavours, but it also aids in halting
bacterial growth, something one need always be aware of when dealing with meat,
never more so than when it’s minced (ground).
Keep everything cold. Chill your machine, your work bowls and
even the meat until the very last moment. This is not just
bout hygiene, but chilled meat is less gummy and much easier
to work with. If buying meat, as opposed to ‘procuring’ it
from the late Mr. Wiggles, ask your butcher to grind it for you: it’s
no less authentic or genuine, and home mincers tend to be rubbish, adding
nothing to the actual process.
Remember while cooking them-either on the grill, best, or in
a sauté pan
with peppers and onions, still excellent, -that slow, even heat is best. You
didn’t take all that care just to rupture them on the grill. Fire still
too high when you’re ready to grill? Dribble some water on the coals
before you toss them on (a garden watering can works wonders). They come off
when there is still just a blush of pink in the absolute centre. They’ll
continue to cook as you open more wine. If you operate on the precept that
most sausages are overcooked, you will be extra sensitive to overcooking. And
you’ll be rewarded with the most mouth-watering sausage you’re
likely to ever have. Making
fresh sausages…..do it once and you’ll be the best cook
most of your friends know. |
Here is
our classic recipe for fresh sausages.
You’ve heard the phrase, eating high on the hog. It’s
actually a reference to the fact that the most tender cuts are
on the back of any quadruped- ‘higher up’ on the
animal, or further away from the ground’- the part of the
animal that you want your grilling steaks cut from, just not
your pot roast. You only need to think of the difference between
a duck’s red breast and a chicken’s white to understand
that it’s habitual use that darkens, but also flavours,
any particular cut. Best split the difference. Ask your butcher
for 70 % ground pork belly and 30% shoulder, which should give
you the right amount of fat to lean meat, the right balance between
the unctuous richness of the belly, and the robust and macho
flavours of the shoulder. If you don’t know how fatty your
average local pig is coming to market, ask your butcher his or
her sausage recipe. Ask anyway. Not only is it fascinating but
you’ll find that your new status will award you more
attention and probably even better meat. Few things will
endear you to your local butcher quite like taking an active
interest in his craft.

Ingredients.
Sausage meat (at least a few kilos)
Casings (hog or mutton, depending on size of funnel. You’ll
buy both from your butcher, who will calculate the proper
length)
Fennel seeds
Anisette (Sambuca, or whatever you have. Pastis even works).
Salt, 16 grams per kilo of meat.
Ground chilli flakes to taste*
Dried herbs, such as a French dried herb blend (we use this only
for sausage making, where you need the concentrated flavours
of dried herbs. A single jar lasts us a year and we make these
all the time.)
Specialty
machine, a sausage stuffer. Perhaps a kitchen scale, if you
come from a ‘volume’ (versus ‘weight’)
nation. A kilo is 2.2 pounds.
The
morning of, soak the fennel seeds in anisette, preferably uncovered
as to allow the alcohol to evaporate. Invite best friends over. Keep
everything as cold as possible, even the machine itself.
Place meat in a large bowl, and add salt as evenly as possible.
Mix in herbs, fennel seeds and chilli peppers to taste (see
note). Mix thoroughly, say, for 25 seconds but not more.
Slip casings on front of machine and follow manufactures instructions.
Grill or sauté. Don’t overcook. If sautéing,
start with onions and bell peppers and a little white wine. *Note.
When seasoning, form a tiny patty and sauté until
cooked through. Taste and adjust seasoning.
Shoot
us an email and tell us how yours turned out! |
|
© 2007-08
The Awaiting Table - All Rights Reserved
|
|