- Aug 25, 2016
- 16
- 17
I just finished a round of bratwurst. Came out amazingly good. The one item I experimented with was a substitute for soy concentrates as a binder. I had read a good amount as to whether binders did anything or were just fillers, and I must say, the jury is still out on that topic. This time around I decided to try rice flour as a binder, and, the recipe succeeded, although I have no idea how much the rice flour contributed. Here is the recipe I used
meat:
3 pounds pork shoulder butt (boneless)
1 pound veal (I used packaged ground veal)
1 pound fat (I used leftover brisket fat from my last brisket)
Spices:
3 tablespoons kosher salt
2 teaspoons white pepper
1.5 teaspoons ground ginger
1.5 teaspoons ground nutmeg
0.5 teaspoons mace
0.5 teaspoons coriander
0.5 teaspoons marjoram
0.75 cup rice flour
after grinding:
2 eggs
1 cup heavy cream
casings (I use hog casings)
I mixed the spices and rice flour, diced the meat, added the spices, mixed thoroughly and let sit in the fridge for a few hours.
I ground the meat, and after grinding added the eggs and heavy cream and mixed till very uniform (it was a fairly sticky mess). I sauteed a sample and tasted. Satisfied, I stuffed into 3 hogs casings, and had some left over (froze it and will use it for turkey stuffing on thanksgiving)
I gave it a medium smoking at a very low temperature (175F , 80C) until internal temperature of 155F (70C). Stopped the cooking with an ice bath, and the brats were ready for grilling. The first samples I did, I simmered in beer mixed with butter, thinly sliced onions, and some cayenne pepper for 30 minutes. Then I grilled and served on a roll with mustard and sauerkraut with a side of potato salad. The brats were amazingly juicy. The meat had a wonderful texture. Definitely a keeper.
meat:
3 pounds pork shoulder butt (boneless)
1 pound veal (I used packaged ground veal)
1 pound fat (I used leftover brisket fat from my last brisket)
Spices:
3 tablespoons kosher salt
2 teaspoons white pepper
1.5 teaspoons ground ginger
1.5 teaspoons ground nutmeg
0.5 teaspoons mace
0.5 teaspoons coriander
0.5 teaspoons marjoram
0.75 cup rice flour
after grinding:
2 eggs
1 cup heavy cream
casings (I use hog casings)
I mixed the spices and rice flour, diced the meat, added the spices, mixed thoroughly and let sit in the fridge for a few hours.
I ground the meat, and after grinding added the eggs and heavy cream and mixed till very uniform (it was a fairly sticky mess). I sauteed a sample and tasted. Satisfied, I stuffed into 3 hogs casings, and had some left over (froze it and will use it for turkey stuffing on thanksgiving)
I gave it a medium smoking at a very low temperature (175F , 80C) until internal temperature of 155F (70C). Stopped the cooking with an ice bath, and the brats were ready for grilling. The first samples I did, I simmered in beer mixed with butter, thinly sliced onions, and some cayenne pepper for 30 minutes. Then I grilled and served on a roll with mustard and sauerkraut with a side of potato salad. The brats were amazingly juicy. The meat had a wonderful texture. Definitely a keeper.








