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Don't trim! The main reason pork butt is the #1 cut for sausage, is that is has almost sufficient fat for sausage just by itself! Usually 20, 25% I'd guess for a really fatty one. You want 20-30% fat in sausage. Absolutely don't throw that fat away! On a lean butt, you might even need to add fat depending on your product.Here's my question for the sausage experts:
When cutting up bone-in pork butts for sausage do you trim at all or just cube all it up grind? I'm using it for just general sausage. Breakfast, italian, brats, ect. Thanks!
I have a different method when preparing a butt for grinding. First, I cut off the Coppa roast which is the money muscle and "tubes" which are smaller muscles, and trim it for smoking or curing. I prefer it shy of pullable to make very tender slices.When cutting up bone-in pork butts for sausage do you trim at all or just cube all it up grind?
Bingo.Take out the gland and anything that looks like something you don't want to eat . Leave the hard fat and get rid of any slimy fat
Most bang for your buck . I love it . I've cured them , then smoked and used in a pot of beans .I leave a little meat on the blade bones, season and flavor smoke them
I'm new and have only used my KA grinder until I commit to a counter top ginder. I just 1-2" cubed my butt and removed any nefarious tendons or stringy stuff. 1st grind went ok. sausage was on point. did a couple of beef chucks with same approach. smash burgers were good too.Here's my question for the sausage experts:
When cutting up bone-in pork butts for sausage do you trim at all or just cube all it up grind? I'm using it for just general sausage. Breakfast, italian, brats, ect. Thanks!e
That's how I look at it .the whole idea of making your own sausage is to make a high quality product with just enough fat to hold it all together.
I find those to be pretty clean . They say something like minimally processed on the label .Anyone know if the gland is removed from boneless butts? I am pretty happy with GFS (Swift) boneless of late.
IMHO the whole idea of making your own sausage is to make a high quality product with just enough fat to hold it all together.
Those pork steaks look amazing! Nothing like the ones in the grocery store.Will give that a try for sure. Do you cook them low and slow or treat them like beef? I guess both could work. Just wondering if they are still too tough at 140 or so?Take out the gland and anything that looks like something you don't want to eat . Leave the hard fat and get rid of any slimy fat . Once and awhile you'll find other junk in there too , like veins and vessels .
This is from last week . I don't usually take the fat cap off , but I was making some Mortadella and needed the fat cubes . I had another butt that was added to that . Those steaks are on the grill as I type .
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Normal prep looks like this . I have a number 12 500 watt grinder . So I cut the chunks pretty big . I don't par freeze .
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Also , if you're grinding more than one butt , grind them separate , and mix it in on itself after grinding . That way it keeps your lean to fat ratio around 80/20 .
Don't cube and cull out chunks for batches then grind .