Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volume 2 (122 page)

BOOK: Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volume 2
9.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

With the casing in place, you are now ready to stuff it. Have in mind how long you want your sausages to be, how many, if any, you want linked together, and if they are to be linked, whether the meat mixture is soft enough so that you can safely twist the filled casing into lengths without bursting it. This is mostly a matter of trial and error; if you want no errors and have plenty of casing, fill and either link or cut and tie one sausage at a time. To minimize air spaces and bubbles, watch casing carefully as you are filling it; when air spaces develop, push filled casing against end of horn to force air back into stuffer. In severe instances, when you are making linked sausages, you will have to cut the casing, tie it, and start a new series of links.

 

A pastry bag works surprisingly well for either stiff or soft sausage mixtures.
You will need 2
metal tubes 2
inches long with
½-
inch openings at the small end. One is holding the casing around its outside; the other is fitted inside a 12- to 14-inch bag.

 

This oversize hypodermic consists of wooden plunger, cylinder, and detachable horn.
It works well for soft mixtures like the
boudin blanc.

For stiffer blends, you have to brace the end of the tube against the edge of a table. A pastry bag is easier in this case.

 

A stuffing horn of plastic or metal 4 inches long, ¾
inch in diameter at the small end, and 2¼ at the large end fits most grinders of the type illustrated here.
They often come as extra equipment, or can be ordered from butcher or mail-order houses.

Sometimes the grinder is operated with cutting knife
(
a
)
and disk
(
b
)
as well as horn
(
c
), and sometimes not; if you have no instructions, you will have to try both ways. Some meat grinders work fairly well as sausage stuffers; others are maddeningly unsatisfactory.

 

Operate meat grinder at slow speed if it is electric, and hold casing horizontal with horn as meat goes in;
this is to avoid air bubbles. When sausage meat has gone into casing, slip a free 3 or 4 inches of empty casing from horn and cut off with scissors.

 

Tie a knot in the casing close against the meat at each end.
For linked sausages, twist slowly and carefully to make the separations.
Tie a piece of white string at each separation.

Other books

Sweet by Emmy Laybourne
Scarlett by Mickens, Tiece D
How to Get Dirt by S. E. Campbell
Kiss of The Christmas Wind by Janelle Taylor
The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford
Dying in Style by Elaine Viets