I have been blessed to have extended family that held on to the old school recipes. I make andouille, boudin, hog head cheese, sausages, and hams.Dang. I wish I lived near you - I could learn so much...
When we make a big family batch of 120# of andouille, we grind and stuff all in one day. It's too much of a bother to grind it one day, mix the cure in with a little water to release the Actocin and myosin proteins (natural binding agent) and let the cure begin to penetrate for 24 hours. We will be resting the links after stuffing anyways so we do it all at once, then let the grind cure and bind stuffed in the casing. This is how I have always made sausage. I understand that some professional butchers like to mix the cure in early to let it start penetrating, and mix the first grind to release binding proteins. So, if one does this first, the cure does not need time to penetrate after stuffing.My family has nearly zero cooking traditions, so I've started from scratch. That's both good and bad - no rich collection of recipes, but no attitude about "this is how it's done because this is how it's always been done."
Fun to learn, though!
I'm really enjoying experimenting with sausage.
Yea, I do that with 26~32 mm hog casing sausages, never use string or hog rings on those, just twist as you mentioned and tie knots in the ends. I am not a fan of collagen casings, for the reasons you mention.
Usually you don't need anything.... Pinch the casings to separate the links... alternate directions to roll the link.... left, right, left etc... that way you can leave the links laying right on the table or sheet pan and you don't have to pick them up... Make sense ??? Do that as you are stuffing the casing so you will know just how full to fill the casing... As you are rolling it will become clear that only every other link needs rolling... I roll 2 revolutions.. a 24 hour rest in the fridge will allow the casing to firm up... cut into manageable lengths....
Collagen casings, I have some problems with... they seem to want to tear and rip... Same deal, pinch into wanted length... some collagen casing you can't hang.. some you can.. therefore some are delicate and tear easily.. Anyhow, I find.... pinch... wrap the pinched area a full circle and then some... with elec. fence wire... pinch gently with pliers and cut the wire to length... I just try to keep the casing from opening up while it is curing and drying... For hanging sausages, string is best... the wire is pretty small in diameter and can cut the collagen casing... If the casings you use permit a wire tie, the aluminum is soft enough to loop and twist easily...
S, They work well on fibrous casings which IMHO are tougher to tie up then natural casings.Sorry for my ignorance, but how (and when) do you use them? Advantages/disadvantages?
Waste of money, simple twist of your 2 times and your done.
The 50mm salumi kits from UMAi actually come with little zip ties. Very nice.
I do like the zip tie idea. I love zip ties and use them like duct tap around here!
I've never made balogna but I do have some canada goose breasts that a buddy gave me and he says goose balogna is pretty damn good. Might try it.The 50mm salumi kits from UMAi actually come with little zip ties. Very nice.
I do like the zip tie idea. I love zip ties and use them like duct tap around here!
I've only used rings for balogna. Still getting the hang of it...
Why don't you just use butchers twine and tie it off . I use 2.5" x 20: casings for my summer sausage and one end already has the twime in a loop. I just tie off the other end with twine and hang them in the smoker.