threadkiller wrote:Slotkowski used to supply at least one of them. But they got bought out by Sausages by Amy in 1992, so I'm not sure where it went from there.
Meat Processing: The latest news in sausages is in casing technology — co-extrusion as well as natural wrote: Sausages by Amy is the creation of Amy and her husband Richard "Chico" Kurzawski. Amy is the third generation in the Tiahnybik family sausage business begun by her grandfather Leon in 1924 in Chicago. Amy's father Irv took over the business in 1966, and Amy and Chico did the same in 1991. They purchased Slotkowski Sausage in 1992, and launched Amy's signature brand in 1994. Sausages by Amy now markets all three brands: Leon's, Slotkowski, and Sausages by Amy from its Chicago headquarters.
Amy, creator and CEO of Sausages by Amy, and Ed Kleine, vice president of operations for the company, gave Meat Processing insight into why the company utilizes only natural pork and lamb casings for their sausages and artificial casings for their deli products. "We source casings that match up to the customer's specifications for the finished product," Kurzawski says. "Natural casings will vary in diameter, so they are used when the customer is not concerned with each piece being identical to others. Customers looking for exact uniformity will go with skinless product." While Sausages By Amy uses lamb casings, the company's traditional Leon's Sausage and Slotkowski Sausage use pork casings or cellulose casings for skinless. The skinless casing products offer a labor saving benefit," Kleine says. "Skinless casings are designed to run on high-speed linking equipment, and the productivity is higher as compared to natural casings." The company's Polish sausage is offered with both options to accommodate the customer's planned reheating methods. "Natural casings provide more of an old-world look," Kurzawski says. "They give the familiar snap of traditional sausage products."
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
When I took the Maxwell St. Tour some years back, their polish was custom made with no vendor specified. They were very specific the only Vienna product was the hot dog, which was also their lowest profit item.
Of course, things change over time.
Regards,