The Accidental Smallholder Forum

Livestock => Pigs => Topic started by: WoodlandsDevon on February 16, 2016, 06:53:41 am

Title: Making sausages- should avoid putting fat in altogether?
Post by: WoodlandsDevon on February 16, 2016, 06:53:41 am
I need to make some sausages but the meat I have is quite fatty and some people say not to put fat in sausages. Is this right? should I remove all the fat and just put meat in??
Thanks
Title: Re: Making sausages- should avoid putting fat in altogether?
Post by: Clarebelle on February 16, 2016, 07:14:02 am
I've only made sausages once so I'm no expert but I'm pretty sure that fat is an essential part of a sausage recipe. They need a certain fat content to stay moist. I would say you wouldn't need to remove the fat but then I guess it depends just how fatty your meat is?
Title: Re: Making sausages- should avoid putting fat in altogether?
Post by: HappyHippy on February 16, 2016, 07:26:42 am
You need fat in your sausages!
The ratio is normally around 80% meat, to 20% fat.
The majority of this will come out during cooking but it's what adds flavour and succulence  :yum:
HTH
Title: Re: Making sausages- should avoid putting fat in altogether?
Post by: Dan on February 16, 2016, 10:12:04 am
The first year we kept pigs we made our own sausages with almost no fat, thinking they would be fab.  :dunce:

They were pretty unpalatable - dry, tasteless and mealy.

You need the fat for flavour and mouth-feel - listen to HappyHippy, she knows what she's talking about.  :)
Title: Re: Making sausages- should avoid putting fat in altogether?
Post by: oaklandspigs on February 16, 2016, 12:14:15 pm
The fat makes at least half of the flavour !

and they're good fats nowadays !

and don't grind your meat too small - slow home grown pork has texture as well as flavour, and you don't want to lose that in a fine ground mush! Leave that to Tesco !
Title: Re: Making sausages- should avoid putting fat in altogether?
Post by: hughesy on February 16, 2016, 05:01:35 pm
70/30 percent lean to fat is ideal. And don't forget the rusk! Don't fall for this 100% meat sausage nonsense that seems to be doing the rounds again.
Title: Re: Making sausages- should avoid putting fat in altogether?
Post by: MAK on February 16, 2016, 07:23:16 pm
Yep 80:20 meat to fat which typically is shoulder meat.  Try Toulouse sausages if you don't want to use rusk. Herbs, garlic,nutmeg and red wine are needed or buy the mix from Weschenfelders.
Title: Re: Making sausages- should avoid putting fat in altogether?
Post by: DavidandCollette on February 16, 2016, 07:23:52 pm
Just made some duck breast sausage, added pork belly, but still came out dry, but nice. Make sure you keep the fat in!
Title: Re: Making sausages- should avoid putting fat in altogether?
Post by: Buffy the eggs layer on February 20, 2016, 06:31:30 am
The dont add fat advice that you have been given is sound but has been given out of context. If you use the traditional shoulder and belly recipe then the belly has the fat already so no you dont need to add any to that. If you are mincing up bits and pieces of lean meat then yes 20 to 30 % fat.


The skin of the sausage acts like a pressure cooker and along with the hot fat inside the sausage cooks the meat. The fat also transports the meat flavours and juices into the rusk which absorbs it and creates a moist, juicy flavoursome sausage.


The secret to a sausage comprises of 5 key elements of meat, fat, flavour enhancer ( salt, herbs ) rusk and casing, which works. These days sadly many people seem to think that the rusk and the fat are just cheap fillers but they are all essential to make a great sausage.


I use 80% lean meat and pinhead rusk, salt, pepper and herbs or a pre mixed seasoning from butchers sundries and only mince once on a coarse setting.  By all means play around with your sausage recipe until you get it just how you like it. The bast way is to mix a small amount of your ingredients then make a patty and fry it off and taste it. If its good mix the rest and fill the casings. If its not adjust your ratios. Sausage making is great fun. Enjoy!


heres some I made earlier  ;D