We made chicken sausage with spinach and Mexican crumbling cheese, beef fajita sausage, and Swedish potato sausage.
First up was to prep the chicken for the chicken sausage. I used about 50/50 dark and white meat for this and it has worked well for me in the past.
The dark meat was mostly legs and thighs

The meat was COLD, if you look close you can see the ice crystals.

All the meat was removed from the bone and then the bones were cracked and placed into a pot for making broth.


After cutting the chicken from the bone and getting the broth started we prepped the beef for the fajita sausage. No pics of grinding since most all of us are familiar with that process.
Veggies and spices ready for the beef fajita sausage






Fajita sausage all mixed up and ready to chill for a while!

Chicken sausage mixing time.
Spices ready to mix

#1 son chopping the spinach

Yes, he's a perfectionist!


Time to get messy!



The finished products came out really well. The chicken sausage is now the wife's favorite and the beef fajita will ROCK with a few more tweaks!


The boy's take home kit! LOTS of sausage! Top row is chicken sausage, middle is potato, and far right in the coils is fajita. We plan to smoke the fajita tomorrow morning.

Now, about the sausages:
The chicken sausage is nothing that hasn't been done on here before, but I'm not sure if others do theirs at the end the way we do. Once all of the chicken sausage is stuffed, I drop it into 185 degree water and let it poach until the internal temperature just exceeds 165 degrees F. At that point I drop the poached sausages into an ice water bath and then vacuum pack for freezing. By doing this I've never had an issue defrosting in the frig and then smoking until hot.
The beef fajita sausage is something #1 and I have been discussing for a while and we decided to do it this week while he was home. Instead of running the veggies through the grinder like we did on the potato and chicken sausages, we course chopped these for the fajita. I think we would have been better off if we hadn't grilled the veggies first since we lost a little color and they got a bit softer than we wanted prior to cooking. Now, the flavor is there, but still needs a little tweaking before we all it finalized for the main recipe book we keep.
The broth mentioned earlier is used for not only the liquids in these 2 sausages, but it's also the base for the poaching water used for the chicken sausages. Today we had 3 pots of broth going due to all of the bones we generated. We started with around 5-gallons of water and ended up with just over 1-gallon of very rich broth. The broth we didn't use was cooled and then poured into ice trays for future use.
I didn't take any pics of the potato sausage work since I've posted that one a couple of times before.
If anyone would like the recipes or has any questions, just let me know. I'm going to eat a plate full of potatis korv now!

Charlie