Since the grilling/smoking season is upon us:
If I didn't want to grind and stuff my own, Tony's was once my source of fresh, uncooked hot link sausage on the NW side: assertively spiced, natural casing, very good mix of lean and fat, coarsely ground, and they smoked up nicely (or grilled nicely, too, in a pinch for time).
Generally, I like a coarse ground hot link, but I admit to a weakness, since a fortuitous early childhood exposure, to the DayGlo bright-red, finely-ground grease-bomb variety. My first encounter with this variant was in Pittsburg, Northeast Texas, and they're a staple in the Mississippi Delta, too. Admittedly, they very well might be an acquired taste. In the past, when I got a real hankering, I mail-ordered them from Pittsburg, but the shipping costs rivaled the cost of the links.
Tony's seems to have stopped offering their in-house fresh hot links (at least at my location), but, a few months ago, there appeared these squirty and artery-clogging jewels: Magnolia Hot Links from Magee, MS.
They are a perfect example of the genre.
Be careful when grilling, as these links exude a grease more incendiary than high-octane jet fuel. Warning: they are usually eaten using a knife and fork (almost always of the plastic variety; sporks work, too). I've been tempted to try them in a bun, but they tend to erupt shooting grease of Mount Vesuvious magnitudes.
These pair wonderfully with a nice vinegar/pepper sauce; the hot/sour acidity tames the grease, and provides an almost musical counter-point.
I used this, obtained on my last drive back to TX.
But, damnit, I am out of saltine crackers, the accompaniment in Pittsburg.
Cheers,
Wade
"Remember the Alamo? I do, with the very last swallow."