sausage is easy to make. All you have to do is grind up meat and add in spices and veggies to your liking.
- While making sausage, i keep a hot cast iron pan on the stove top....i'll take my spiced up concoction and make tiny little patties (like the size of a silver dollar, tops) and cook it up. pop that little meat nugget and adjust your spices accordingly. Once you have the right taste down, write down the recipe, and encase it. wonderful sausage.
- The next best thing that i do is make burgers. Go to Northwestern Cutlery and get a hamburger press. Take some sirloin steaks and ground them with either bacon or pork fat - about a 3-1 or 4-1 ratio of meat to fat - whatever you feel like. Add your favorite spices, veggies, peppers, cheese or whatever and then press them into patties. At this point you can either cook them up or freeze them (i suggest packs of two). As your increasing veggies (like onions, red peppers, etc) increase your "binder" as well. Your binder can either be fat or evaporated milk - and it'll keep the patty together better.
Some quick advice:
meat grinds the best and stays the most tender when it's
extremely cold. It's also safer that way. It is a little bit of a process - and i take breaks to put meat at different stages back into the freezer. So, cube it, put it back in the freezer. Then when almost frozen, grind it. Spice it up, back in the freezer. Once extremely cold again, encase it. My rule of thumb is that the meat should be cold enough that it gets your hands uncomfortably cold after a few minutes.
Ice - at the end of the grind - will help push out the remaining meat and help start the cleaning process by getting the internals nice and wet.
Putting your grinder parts (i don't know the ins and outs of kitchen aid grinder, but almost everything but my motor detatches on mine) in the freezer before a grind helps keep the meat really cold. Obviously only put in parts that are solid metal with no intricate moving parts or anything.
have fun.