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Thread: Sausage and Smoke Cooking
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02-10-2019, 06:25 PM #1
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First of all, this stuff isn’t easy. I like to think that it has a lot of similarities with pastry making. You have to be precise, you have to be really organized, and you have a series of steps that all must go perfectly for it to turn out. I personally dislike fibrous casings for this reason. They don’t constrict the way a natural casing does. A natural casing seems to constrict and force excess moisture and fat out. Once meat hits 150 degrees tha proteins begin forcing out moisture. It seems that there will always be some of this in the absence of a binder. Cooking it too hard only makes it worse though.Last edited by OCDshaver; 02-10-2019 at 06:34 PM.
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02-10-2019, 09:14 PM #2
When I make my smoked kielbasa I use large hog casings/usually around 32- 36mm and once stuffed I use a needle to poke any air pockets as if you don;t they can allow fat to collect.
I've played with the collagen casings but I don't really like them. With that said if used properly they have their place.
The sausage my friend made is from a kit and it includes the fibrous casing. I've been tempted to order some beef middles and try them using the spice mix just to see what happens.
When we made them here, it took about 10 hours to get the internal temp up to 165-then showering them until they were about 80-90 degs before bringing inside to hang to dry--Low and Slow is the Way to Go. He was so pleased with how they came out, the casings weren't shriveled, there wasn't any fat between the sausage and the casings and they were a nice moisture level.
But he showed up the next day with a batch he'd just made, said they were done in about 4 hours and they were shriveled and full of fat on the outside. So I do think that my friend will continue not stuffing tightly enough and using too high of heat.
I think it's part of what he battles with. I'm not sure but for some reason Bi Polar comes to mind. I know it wasn't until after he had two kids and his wife divorced him (out of the clear blue sky--papers were served to him at work 4 days before Christmas) that he was diagnosed with whatever it is that ails him. All and all he's a great guy, it just that at times he's compulsive about things.Our house is as Neil left it- an Aladdins cave of 'stuff'.
Kim X
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02-10-2019, 11:08 PM #3
I have issues with curing/aging/decomposing/rotting or how ever you call it, meat on purpose.
These types of thing came about when they had no choice on how to store their food like refrigeration.
I am not a cleanliness freak and think that things introduced into your body slowly build up resistance that with our radiated etc. food source now a days doesn't is not necessarily bad.
But doing it on purpose when you have a choice.......
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02-10-2019, 11:13 PM #4
Our house is as Neil left it- an Aladdins cave of 'stuff'.
Kim X
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02-10-2019, 11:23 PM #5
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02-10-2019, 11:40 PM #6
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02-12-2019, 12:56 AM #7
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Thanked: 734I got to slice up some of the coppa from the other day. Tasty.
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Dieseld (02-12-2019)
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02-12-2019, 01:20 AM #8
Sounds great!
How did the case hardening come out with the storage?Our house is as Neil left it- an Aladdins cave of 'stuff'.
Kim X
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02-10-2019, 11:14 PM #9
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I know people with bi polar. But I’m not qualified to diagnose anything either. But his condition may not have anything to do with sausage making. He might simply not get it or maybe his smoker is such that regulating heat is all but impossible. When I got a Bradley I was finally able to regulate heat. My other smokers were esssentially bbq units. They were good for ribs but not good for sausage. And I certainly couldn’t cold smoke in it.
Back to the fibrous casings. I used them a few months ago to make some cooked sausage. They were tight and full. I poked a thousand holes in each of them to allow moisture to escape. I then cooked the sous vide at a very gentle temperature. Same thing. Upon cooling they had a nice porky jelly inside the casing. The casing was coming off anyway so it didn’t affect the outcome much. But not exactly appealing either. I may even use up what I have. But I certainly won’t buy them again. An emulsifier might help but beef middle would too. I’ll go with the beef middle.