
Frequently Asked Questions
MEAT GRINDERS How Much You Will Use It: For those who use a grinder only once or
twice a year or grind just a few pounds of meat at a time, a hand
grinder will probably be fine. The size hand grinder you buy will
depend on your physical capabilities; the bigger they are the harder
they turn. If you plan on grinding meat on a regular basis or do not
want to crank by hand you need to buy electric grinder. We recommend
a size # 10 or larger. MAKING SAUSAGE What You Need Meat grinder (hand or electric). The first thing in making good sausage is to take care of your meat. Keep it clean and keep it cold. Next bone out the meat you choose for putting into sausage (it will surprise you how much meat you can get from the neck and rib areas if you try). After boning the meat, keep it cold or frozen until you are ready to make sausage. Add pork for flavor and to provide some fat to the usually lean game meat. How much pork to add, you ask? That would depend on how you want your sausage to cook up, how lean your game meat is, what type of game meat and type of pork you are using. Here are some guidelines for Venison or Elk: Using a ratio of 50% game meat with 50% pork butts or pork shoulders
will give you a high quality sausage with a pork influence. Hint:
Use a ratio of 60% game meat with 40% pork butts or pork shoulders
if the game meat has some fat showing. Our choice is to use 75/25 or 80/20 ratio depending on how fat our game is. You can use Feral hog for the pork if you have it or use your Feral hog to make 100% pork sausage. Pick the ratio you want, weigh out the game and pork and grind using a 3/8" or larger grinding plate. We recommend you start by making 5lb. batches. Assign each batch a number and carefully log down everything you do in making each batch. Later, as you use the sausage you can look back at that batch in your log and adjust the next batch for any changes you might need or want to make. (too hot, not hot enough, etc). Most premixed seasonings come packaged for a certain amount of meat. Read the label to determine the amount of seasoning needed for your batch of meat. Also you will find it easier to use premixed seasoning than trying to weight out each ingredient. Mix your seasonings with water and pour over the meat. After mixing thoroughly, regrind using the 3/16" grinding plate. When you regrind, use the stuffing horn to put the sausage into the casing (for fresh links) or bags (for pan sausage). You can make sausage rope style and cut it into smaller pieces later. You can also make small links as you go, leaving 6" unfilled casing between each link, cutting and tying the links as you go. Wrap with freezer paper or put in freezer bags before storing in the freezer. TO MAKE SMOKED SAUSAGE YOU NEED: All the above If you choose to cold smoke your sausage you must add cure with the seasoning to prevent your meat from spoiling. Just add the cure in with the seasoning in any batch you plan to smoke. Cure allows you to cold smoke your sausage at low temperatures. After you stuff the sausage you plan to cold smoke into casings, let it hang until the internal temperature approaches room temperature. Place the sausage into a smokehouse preheated to 120-130° F and allow the internal temperature of the sausage to rise to around 90-100 ° F. Start your smoke at this time. Raise the smokehouse temperature to 140° F and let smoke for 1 to 4 hours. The longer you smoke the meat the stronger the smoke taste will be. When the smoking time is finished raise the smokehouse temperature to 170-175 ° F. Continue to cook until the internal temperature of the sausage is 152 ° F for a fully cooked sausage. Once the sausage has an internal temperature of 152° F remove it from the smokehouse and shower with cool water until the internal temperature has dropped to 100° F or lower. This will reduce shriveling and shrinkage and remove any smoke residue from the sausage. Allow sausage to hang at room temperature for 1-2 hours. This will allow the sausage to finish blooming. For a partially cooked product, yet with some smoke flavor, you can remove the sausage after the desired smoke level is obtained. You would need to then freeze the sausage for later cooking and use. You will also need a smokehouse of some sort. We have seen underground pits, 55 gallon drums, old refrigerators, wooden buildings, and backyard pits, so use your imagination. A heat source can be a small hotplate, your BBQ pit, a gas burner, etc. The difference between cold smoking and cooking with smoke is the temperature you use and the time it takes. Cold smoking is smoking at low temperatures usually around 100 F°. Cold smoking will flavor your sausage with the smoke flavor and dry your sausage. At temperatures of 140° and above you start to cook your sausage. To obtain a smoked yet fully cooked product you need smokehouse temperatures above 175° F. to bring your internal temperature up to 152° F. You must use a cure when smoking sausages . Types Of Sausage Fresh Sausage: Contains seasoned pork, beef, veal, wild game or any
combination. Since these sausages are made from fresh meats, they
should be kept tightly wrapped and refrigerated up to STUFFERS Stuffers Come In Several Designs Including Push, Crank And Hydraulic.
They are Made Of Cast Iron, Stainless, Plastic Or Combinations of
Several. Fibrous casings are more suitable for summer sausage and similar products because of their greater strength and the variety of sizes available. They are permeable to smoke and moisture and can easily be removed from the finished product. These casings should be soaked before use in 80 to 100 °F water for at least 30 minutes, but not more than four hours before use. If the casings are not pre-stuck they should be punctured with a knife point or pin to eliminate air and fat pockets in the finished sausage. Collagen casings contain the attributes of both natural and fibrous casings. They have been developed primarily for use in products such as fresh pork sausage and pepperoni sticks. They are uniform in size, relatively strong and easy to handle. These casings also are used for the manufacture of dry sausages, because they are permeable and will shrink. Do not soak Collagen casings in water. For cooked products that are generally water-cooked (like braunschweiger), plastic casings impermeable to water are used.
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Rodriguez Butcher
Supply
1715 W Commerce Street, San Antonio,TX 78207 - Map
800 Number: (800) 227-7297 Phone: (210) 223-6131
Email: sales@homebutcher.com