Back in February, Doug
DougE
posted this thread with his take on a chicken sausage recipe he found online. The link to the original recipe is in his thread...
But for those who don't like clicking on links, here it is converted to metric, copied and pasted with what I used in parenthesis...
The thread was brought back to life a couple of weeks ago and it got me to thinking (yes I know, that's a dangerous thing) that I might want to try it. For my first attempt, I was doing it straight up just like the recipe he used as his base and with chicken thighs on sale for 99¢/lb. this week, no time like the present so here we go...
The recipe calls for 5 lbs. of chicken with the bones removed and the skin left on. It took 10 thighs to get the 5 lbs., actually 2305g. Cut into strips and into the freezer...
Ground through the 6mm plate and then all the spices and stuff added and mixed. Because I was thinking about smoking these, I added cure #1, too...
Stuffed into 28-32mm casings...
Then I did the test fry. This recipe got my attention because the author mentioned the twang it had. Buttermilk powder was mentioned as a substitute for the fermento which is what I did, but there was no twang. While the sausage was OK, it was just OK.
My plan was maybe smoke half of it and leave the other half fresh, but after the test fry, I decided to smoke it all. The sausage went into the fridge uncovered for a day, but that turned into 4 days due to Mother Nature. Finally I got to smoke it. Took about 5 hours to get the I.T. up to 155℉ using hickory. Then into a water bath at 175℉-180℉ to get them done. Into an ice bath at 175℉ I.T. and then hanging out...
But I had to try a piece to see what it tasted like...
I don't know if it was the 4 days in the fridge, the hickory smoke, or a combination of the 2, but WOW, what a difference from the fresh. Still no twang, but the flavor difference was amazing and now this may well stay on the list. Going to try a couple of tweaks next time though, like adding the parm that Doug added and maybe omitting the sage, I couldn't taste it. Other suggestions would be adding a white wine like Riesling and some lemon zest (thanks Eric SmokinEdge for tolerating me and my questions ) Also maybe grind a second time through a smaller plate, but not sure what that would add other than a texture change, but I like the courser texture of a single grind.
Ended up with these...
Chicken Sausage
I guess you could call it a chicken parm sausage with my additions to this base recipe: https://tasteofartisan.com/homemade-chicken-sausage/ To this recipe, I add 170g shredded parmesan cheese and 40 or so grams of finely chopped sun dried tomato. 5 lb. of deboned, skin on chicken thighs...
www.smokingmeatforums.com
But for those who don't like clicking on links, here it is converted to metric, copied and pasted with what I used in parenthesis...
- 2270 g chicken meat with skins Meat from whole chickens, deboned, with skins or boneless skin-on chicken thighs/legs. (I had 2305g)
- 30 g kosher salt heaping
- 6 g sugar heaping
- 60 g powdered buttermilk or fermento (I used the buttermilk powder)
- 5 g black pepper
- 2 g nutmeg
- 6 g granulated onion
- 6 g granulated garlic
- 17 g fresh finely chopped sage or 1.5 Tbsp rubbed sage (I used fresh sage)
- 17 g fresh finely chopped parsley
- 50 g fresh finely chopped or thinly sliced green onion
- 120 ml chicken broth cold
- 3 g cayenne pepper optional; add more to taste if desired (I didn't add this)
The thread was brought back to life a couple of weeks ago and it got me to thinking (yes I know, that's a dangerous thing) that I might want to try it. For my first attempt, I was doing it straight up just like the recipe he used as his base and with chicken thighs on sale for 99¢/lb. this week, no time like the present so here we go...
The recipe calls for 5 lbs. of chicken with the bones removed and the skin left on. It took 10 thighs to get the 5 lbs., actually 2305g. Cut into strips and into the freezer...
Ground through the 6mm plate and then all the spices and stuff added and mixed. Because I was thinking about smoking these, I added cure #1, too...
Stuffed into 28-32mm casings...
Then I did the test fry. This recipe got my attention because the author mentioned the twang it had. Buttermilk powder was mentioned as a substitute for the fermento which is what I did, but there was no twang. While the sausage was OK, it was just OK.
My plan was maybe smoke half of it and leave the other half fresh, but after the test fry, I decided to smoke it all. The sausage went into the fridge uncovered for a day, but that turned into 4 days due to Mother Nature. Finally I got to smoke it. Took about 5 hours to get the I.T. up to 155℉ using hickory. Then into a water bath at 175℉-180℉ to get them done. Into an ice bath at 175℉ I.T. and then hanging out...
But I had to try a piece to see what it tasted like...
I don't know if it was the 4 days in the fridge, the hickory smoke, or a combination of the 2, but WOW, what a difference from the fresh. Still no twang, but the flavor difference was amazing and now this may well stay on the list. Going to try a couple of tweaks next time though, like adding the parm that Doug added and maybe omitting the sage, I couldn't taste it. Other suggestions would be adding a white wine like Riesling and some lemon zest (thanks Eric SmokinEdge for tolerating me and my questions ) Also maybe grind a second time through a smaller plate, but not sure what that would add other than a texture change, but I like the courser texture of a single grind.
Ended up with these...