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sausage making


Blackpowder
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I am about to enter the world of the home sausage maker. The question is can you store natural casings in a freezer until they are required. Thanks in advance.

 

Blackpowder

 

Just store them in salt in the fridge - you can store them for years like this. They literally have to be buried in salt, and keep them in an air-tight container like a tupperware as they can ponk a bit :lol: Freezer may well damage them.

Edited by aris
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As aris says store them in salt in airtight container though we never let ours fo beyond 6 months

i wouldn't freeze them as with anything meat wise that's been frozen it will start to break down the tissue and weaken it meaning you may get split case's when you stuff them if you don't want to use all you get in one go store them in smaller amounts so you don't have to keep opening and closing the airtight container

Colin

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I am about to enter the world of the home sausage maker. The question is can you store natural casings in a freezer until they are required. Thanks in advance.

 

Blackpowder

I bet you make a couple of batches and it gets packed away. (rubbish ones at that!)

Ive known loads of folk over the years have a bash and end up giving up as you never get anywhere near the quality and consistency that the butcher can.

 

Best of british but its doomed from the start :good:

Edited by robbietherimmer
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I bet you make a couple of batches and it gets packed away. (rubbish ones at that!)

Ive known loads of folk over the years have a bash and end up giving up as you never get anywhere near the quality and consistency that the butcher can.

 

Best of british but its doomed from the start :good:

why would you say that lots of people make great quality sausages i can make them as good as any butcher can

 

colin

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why would you say that lots of people make great quality sausages i can make them as good as any butcher can

 

colin

Sausage making is an art and a science - but certainty not rocket science. Make your way to the forums at sausagemaking.org and learn :-)

 

No reason you can't make as good a quality sausage as a butcher - and certainly anything better than you get at a supermarket.

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As above I have just stored them in the fridge packed in salt. I had some in the fridge for over a year which were fine when I came to use them.

 

When I was butchering the guy I learned from told me not to freeze bacon for more than a few months as the salt can thaw it and then refreeze whilst still in the freezer, turning it rank or changing the flavour.

 

Ignore the negative comment about, bloke sounds like a bit of a *****. I've made some excellent sausages. If you are making venison sausages then I would say don't scrimp on the fat. A good pound or so of belly pork works well. The best I made were with some wild boar belly mixed in with the venison.

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One place beginners come short is fat and salt. Salt should be between 1% and 2%, and fat between 15% and 30% deeding on te type of sausage.

 

Typically I use 1% salt and 20% fat - all by weight. Fat gives succulence and transfers flavour. If doing pigeon, consider it to have no fat - you will have to add some. As as been said, pork belly is a good cheap flavourful source. Keep your fat between 2 and 4 degrees C when mincing - you may consider partially freezing to keep the temp down.

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Just read through a few posts on the sausage making threads, as all ready said on here, skins should be kept salted buried in the salt, not like its expensive. Freezing needs to be avoided it doesn't have any benefits against salting in fact the opposite.

 

Try and put you meat in the freezer to the point of it becoming firm, you water should also be icy cold. Basically all the equipment including the meat should be as cold as possible, its to avoid bacteria cultures starting, and you wont normally use preservatives.

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