The issue of fat out in sausage is a big-ish topic always on the forum. I encourage all sausage makers both new and veteran to chime in here and hash out this topic for everyone to see and read for informational purposes.
In my experience, Fat out is generally caused by poor grinding in process. The fat is either to warm (above 32F) or you have a dull knife plate combination. This causes the fat to smear, creating lard essentially. This lard stops the proteins in the meat when mixing for protein extraction to strand and wrap around the fat particles, this is what is called “bind” in sausage making, and must have a clean pellet style grind of both meat and fat. This requires meat that is par frozen and sharp knives and plates. If this does not occur then the mix cannot effectively bind together and will leave a crumbled texture no matter how you cook the sausage.
Take for example a well made sausage smoked or not. Cook it on a grill hot with some chicken, say above 300F, the sausage if left on to long may actually split the casing, this is caused from steam inside and that requires 212F at sea level. Pretty hot sausage, but if caught early on the split sausage is still juicy and not crumbly. This is because the meat mix had proper bind to begin with. Anyone who grills sausage of any type likes them to “plump up” well that is way to hot internal (way more than 150-160F) and should “fat out” the sausage, however it does not.
Binders such as NFDM, or starches will help bind water and can help with texture in a borderline grind process, but they are not strictly needed at all.
Pay special attention to meat temps when grinding soft fat like pork belly as these will or can smear much easier. Keep it cold through the grinding and mixing process and most likely you will see the fat out disappear.
I encourage all comments here.
In my experience, Fat out is generally caused by poor grinding in process. The fat is either to warm (above 32F) or you have a dull knife plate combination. This causes the fat to smear, creating lard essentially. This lard stops the proteins in the meat when mixing for protein extraction to strand and wrap around the fat particles, this is what is called “bind” in sausage making, and must have a clean pellet style grind of both meat and fat. This requires meat that is par frozen and sharp knives and plates. If this does not occur then the mix cannot effectively bind together and will leave a crumbled texture no matter how you cook the sausage.
Take for example a well made sausage smoked or not. Cook it on a grill hot with some chicken, say above 300F, the sausage if left on to long may actually split the casing, this is caused from steam inside and that requires 212F at sea level. Pretty hot sausage, but if caught early on the split sausage is still juicy and not crumbly. This is because the meat mix had proper bind to begin with. Anyone who grills sausage of any type likes them to “plump up” well that is way to hot internal (way more than 150-160F) and should “fat out” the sausage, however it does not.
Binders such as NFDM, or starches will help bind water and can help with texture in a borderline grind process, but they are not strictly needed at all.
Pay special attention to meat temps when grinding soft fat like pork belly as these will or can smear much easier. Keep it cold through the grinding and mixing process and most likely you will see the fat out disappear.
I encourage all comments here.