Venison sausages (three different types)

Psyxologos

Well-Known Member
I finally bit the bullet and attempted to make my own venison sausages. The base recipe was 60% venison to 40% belly pork.

I then made the following:

a) chilly and choriso
b) Mushroom and red wine
c) apple and onion

Recipes to whoever is interested are available via pm.


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Recipes please mate they sound & look good,

Ta



Sure, no problem. Here is is:

As mentioned in the OP, the base recipe was 60% venison to 40% belly pork for all variants. Salt and pepper to taste.

a) chilly and choriso

This is the most simple recipe of all. All I did was add 150gr of cooking choriso (available from any supermarket) 3 table spoons of smoked paprika and chillies to 1 kg of my base recipe meat (see above). I like mine hot so I used a LOT of scotch bonnets. I added a bit of pepper and that's it.


b) Mushroom and red wine

I ground around 400gr of portobello mushrooms (any other mushroom will do) and added 300ml of red wine (I could and should have used a bit more) to 1 kg of my base recipe meat (see above). I used Merlot, as I wanted a fuller taste. I also added around 10 crushed juniper berries and 5 crushed pimento peppers.

c) apple and onion

I added 500gr of boiled cooking apples to 1 kg of my base recipe meat (see above). I also used 3 table spoons of sage (I could and should have used a bit more), 1 table spoon of ground cinnamon, 1 table spoon of ground cloves, and 2 tea spoons of asafoetida. I finally added 20ml of Robinson's double concentrate apple and blackcurrant cordial (undiluted) for added sweetness and taste (it made a pleasant difference).

This was my first attempt on making sausages, and I have to admit I was worried before I started. After tasting the results though, I am really happy I gave it a go. Next time I will probably tweak the recipe a tad, to add a bit more taste from the dry ingredients. If you like the sausages to have a more meaty flavour, then my recipe definitely achieves that. I just like spices a lot, so it is a matter of taste, really.
 
Always great to hear of someone having a go at making their own bangers. It's a passion that I turned into a profession.

For what it's worth...couple of tips...

Fresh ingredients are great for small batches though be mindful that it is easier to get a consistent mix with evenly distributed seasoning & spice with dry ingredients. Chopping sage for 5lb no problem for 100lb... A little longer but also harder to get even distribution.

Always overseason...by this I mean that when making burgers or sausages the level of seasoning that you should use is far higher than if you were simply sprinkling seasoning onto a venison steak. Think about the increased surface area of a steak once it's been minced!

Fresh ingredients have great punch around 3-4days but the flavour profile can quickly fade. Dry ingredients need at least 2days to develop but pack punch for up to 10days.


Cooking sausages is a vigorous cooking process that involves high heat for long periods, again lends itself to dried spices rather than fresh. As a rule of thumb fresh herbs to finish a dish & dry ones to start. That said some recipes just work!

Always use natural casings... They are superior in every way!

Never ***** your sausages....it will let the fat (flavour) run out & dry out you hard prepped sausage mix. Not to mention the Sausage Police rapid response unit will be knocking down your door!
 
Can't beat making your own bangers, I've got my two kids in on the act too.
Much hilarity trying to stuff sausages too...
140 sausages & some mince from a nice healthy doe last week, jobs a goodun!


 
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