sausage texture
Hi all,
Just wondering.
Today I fried up the most wonderful Italian sausage I have ever tasted. It was plump, juicy and delicious.
Why is this sausage (fresh ) so juicy, while those I cold smoke and poach to the required IT so dry?
I stick to the required fat content.
Must be something else I should try. Any suggestions?
Regards Ursula
Just wondering.
Today I fried up the most wonderful Italian sausage I have ever tasted. It was plump, juicy and delicious.
Why is this sausage (fresh ) so juicy, while those I cold smoke and poach to the required IT so dry?
I stick to the required fat content.
Must be something else I should try. Any suggestions?
Regards Ursula
- Chuckwagon
- Veteran
- Posts:4494
- Joined:Tue Apr 06, 2010 04:51
- Location:Rocky Mountains
Ursula would you provide more details. What was the recipe you used for the Italian sausage? Was it "fresh" style Italian sausage? Also, could you provide some exact details about your "cold smoking". By cold-smoking, are you making a semi-dry cured product by prep-cooking it? Need some more details sweetie! How are your folks doing?
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it probably needs more time on the grill! 

sausage texture
Hi CW,
I followed the Marianski recipe to the letter with my Italian sausages, adding some aniseed to the mixture as well. They were sensational, and definitely will be repeated many times. Half the batch was sweet;the other half hot. Very tasty!
With regards the frankfurters, I can only cold smoke.With my first lot I didn't do any prep cooking at all, merely cold-smoked them for three days, a few hours at a time (probably far too much), never exceeding 70 odd degrees. That probably dried them out a bit too.
The last lot were better - I only smoked them for a couple of hours, but the texture was still too grainy.
In both cases I also poached them after cold smoking in water to reach the internal IT required, but perhaps, as Ross suggested, I did it too slowly, as the IT took quite a while to be reached. I am questioning whether I should have bothered to poach them at all, since they were cured; perhaps they would have retained more moisture and texture if I had simply frozen them, since, after all, they will be cooked to eat anyway>
Regards Ursula
I followed the Marianski recipe to the letter with my Italian sausages, adding some aniseed to the mixture as well. They were sensational, and definitely will be repeated many times. Half the batch was sweet;the other half hot. Very tasty!
With regards the frankfurters, I can only cold smoke.With my first lot I didn't do any prep cooking at all, merely cold-smoked them for three days, a few hours at a time (probably far too much), never exceeding 70 odd degrees. That probably dried them out a bit too.
The last lot were better - I only smoked them for a couple of hours, but the texture was still too grainy.
In both cases I also poached them after cold smoking in water to reach the internal IT required, but perhaps, as Ross suggested, I did it too slowly, as the IT took quite a while to be reached. I am questioning whether I should have bothered to poach them at all, since they were cured; perhaps they would have retained more moisture and texture if I had simply frozen them, since, after all, they will be cooked to eat anyway>
Regards Ursula
sausage texture
And thank you CW,
My parents are doing fine, although my poor mum, who has had a bad stroke, was crying yesterday when she dropped her nearly completed jigsaw puzzle.
Makes your heart melt.
Ursula
My parents are doing fine, although my poor mum, who has had a bad stroke, was crying yesterday when she dropped her nearly completed jigsaw puzzle.
Makes your heart melt.
Ursula
- Chuckwagon
- Veteran
- Posts:4494
- Joined:Tue Apr 06, 2010 04:51
- Location:Rocky Mountains
Hi Ursula,
You wrote,
You also wrote:
Tell your sweet mum to get a hammer and nail down each piece of the puzzle as soon as they snap in place. Then it doesn`t matter if the puzzle gets dropped!
Keep up the good work kid!
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
You wrote,
Cold smoking is usually used on air-dried sausages because of the moisture loss. In the semi-dry and dry-curing, the moisture loss is desired. However, when you are making a cured-cooked-smoked sausage, more retention of moisture is desirable. This is when hot-smoke is used and cooking becomes part of the smoking process. Less moisture is lost and the process is very much shorter, usually only an hour or two."I can only cold smoke. With my first lot I didn't do any prep cooking at all, merely cold-smoked them for three days, a few hours at a time (probably far too much), never exceeding 70 odd degrees. That probably dried them out a bit too."
You also wrote:
Okay sweet lady, remember that curing (with sodium nitrite) destroys cl.botulinum et.al (bacteria). The reason these same sausages are cooked is to destroy the possible infection of trichinella spiralis - a living, nematode worm microorganism. Cooking also destroys other undesirable microorganisms in meat as well, so never omit the prep-cooking process and always make sure the temperature exceeds 138 degrees Fahrenheit (59°C.).I am questioning whether I should have bothered to poach them at all, since they were cured;
Tell your sweet mum to get a hammer and nail down each piece of the puzzle as soon as they snap in place. Then it doesn`t matter if the puzzle gets dropped!

Keep up the good work kid!
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it probably needs more time on the grill! 
