Some musings on a variety of subjects
- Chuckwagon
- Veteran
- Posts:4494
- Joined:Tue Apr 06, 2010 04:51
- Location:Rocky Mountains
Hey, hey, nuynai... you wrote:
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
You wouldn't happen to have a good, authentic, kiska recipe to share with the members of this humble outfit, would you?Being of Polish decent, we have a food similar to Boudin. It's called Kiska.

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! 

- Chuckwagon
- Veteran
- Posts:4494
- Joined:Tue Apr 06, 2010 04:51
- Location:Rocky Mountains
Hey Rongway & Swallow,
Our buddy Seminole has a terrific recipe on this forum for "Hurka" - (Hungarian Blood Sausage). It's a winner. Check it out at this link: http://www.wedlinydomowe.com/sausage-recipes/hurka
Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon
Our buddy Seminole has a terrific recipe on this forum for "Hurka" - (Hungarian Blood Sausage). It's a winner. Check it out at this link: http://www.wedlinydomowe.com/sausage-recipes/hurka
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! 

Kaszanka recipe right her on this site. Only question though...where in the world do I find blood? With slaughter season behind us, I have never even seen blood at my local grocer's that sells everything.Kiska, also known as kaszanka or kishka, is a type of Polish sausage that is made with pork, beef blood and buckweat groats, then wrapped in a hog intestine. Kiska is not a smoked sausage; rather, it is slow-boiled to set the ingredients and congeal the blood until it has its characteristic dark brown color and slightly crumbly texture. Many types of sausage have the name "kishka," but Polish kiska or kishka is not the same as Jewish kishka or Hungarian kishka. What makes Polish kiska unique is the use of the blood and groats.
http://www.wedlinydomowe.com/sausage-recipes/kaszanka
Adding veggies to a sausage mince
I have posted here that I often use cooked rice to push the last of the mince from the stuffing tube and use the resultant mix to form meat balls that I poach. Today I was making a new sausage recipe (more about that later) and had no cooked rice so I peeled and used a carrot. ( I stuff with my grinder) The resut was a lot of small pieces of carrot in the test patty. The taste was pleasing and I think that when next I make some sausage I may grate a carrot or two and add it to the mix. Has anyone done this or heard tell of it?
Ross- tightwad home cook
When you use the cooked rice and mix a fair amount of meat with it and poach it it sinks in the pot at fist and floats when it is done. That works very well both for pushing the last mince out and for the meat balls. The shredded carrots I was thinking about as an ingredient is the sausage not as a by product at the end. Still need to push out the last.
Ross- tightwad home cook
I have some cabinet making to do next week and I have found a retired tool and die maker that has set up a shop for sharpening working tools including meat grinder plates and knives. So I think that I shall send my grinder parts out for sharpening and get some other work done.
Ross- tightwad home cook
Re: Adding veggies to a sausage mince
I've used it in pot-sticker filling and to make an asian-style sausage reminiscent of pot-stickers and steamed dumplings.ssorllih wrote:...The resut was a lot of small pieces of carrot in the test patty. The taste was pleasing and I think that when next I make some sausage I may grate a carrot or two and add it to the mix. Has anyone done this or heard tell of it?
- tom
Don't tell me the odds.
Don't tell me the odds.