Showing posts with label sausage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sausage. Show all posts

Monday, May 10, 2010

Fried Chicken

Traditional fried chicken is not seen on very many fine dinning dinner menus, but it is so delicious. This recipe is designed to bring the everyday, crunchy, juicy wonder of fried chicken into a fork and knife environment.
Ingredients:
Chicken legs and thighs(still attached to each other)
Salt and Pepper
Eggs
Flour
Method:
Take the leg and thigh and lay it inner-thigh up. Make one slice, through the skin only, from the top joint to the base of the leg. Carefully press your knife through the joint, but not through the skin. Pull the leg meat and bone away from the skin leaving a thigh with skin from the leg still attached. For all of the steps, with pictures, check out my picasa page.
Take the leg meat off of the bone and grind it in a meat grinder. Season, whatever the resulting weight is, with 2% salt and as much pepper as you like. Stir well and place on top of the thigh meat. Sprinkle salt onto a rectangle of plastic wrap and place the outside of the skin on top of the salt. Roll the, now seasoned, skin around the sausage and thigh meat and then roll the plastic around that. Rolling stuff in plastic is covered in more detail in this post. Poach the roll in 167F water for 2 hours and then place in an ice bath to cool.
Once completely cooled, remove the plastic wrap and dust the roll in seasoned flour. Submerge in whipped whole eggs that have been seasoned and then place back into the flour. Now the roll should have a good, uniform, coating of flour and egg, but to get uneven nooks and crannies you need one more step. Hold the roll with some extra flour in your hand and drizzle some of the eggs over the roll. As the eggs flow over the flour coating, press more flour into the eggs, creating bumps of egg and flour paste. You do not want to cover the roll evenly with the egg and flour, that is why you are drizzling and not submerging in the egg. Fry immediately in 350F oil until brown and crunchy.
Plate it up!

Rolled chicken thigh, with chicken sausage, cabbage slaw, black truffle ranch, and koni roots.

Breading and then storing in the fridge overnight produces a bad crust, like that of a frozen product. You can make this roll, up until it is breaded, in advance.

Destructively,
Adam

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Cotechino Sausage

I love pork skin, fat, meat, blood, bones, pretty much everything the pig has to offer.  So when I had a discussion with my roommate about a sausage that combined most of those, I was excited to try it out. I do think the addition of some blood to this sausage would be a good thing, but I believe that traditionally Cotechino sausage is simply pork meat, skin, fat, salt and spices.  I went with the traditional to start with, but maybe some boudin noir will be in my near future.
Recipe:
327g pork butt
94g pork skin boiled for 2 hours
94g pork fat
6 g salt                                                                                                        
1tsp pink peppercorn/fennel seed/black pepper
1tsp dextrose
1/16 tsp TCM(tinted curing mix)
4 tbsp water (2 of the tbsp in the form of ice cubes)

A quick aside, I mix measurements because that is how I think they are best interpreted. Some people may say that all of the measures in a recipe should agree (e.g. all grams, all metric, all U.S.), but I don't trust my scale in less than 1g intervals and a volume measure in that case works fine, also, in this particular recipe the water is in tablespoons not because I cannot accurately measure the water in grams but because that is how it is added, by the spoonful, while I am mixing the sausage. Anyway, probably not that important, but I wanted to get that off my chest.

IMPORTANT: When using TCM it is critical that you do not add too much. The stuff can kill you, a lot of things can kill you, but even a small amount of this stuff can be deadly. If you just take care and don't fool around with it, don't use it if you have no idea what it is, there is no reason why it cannot be a safe and useful ingredient in your culinary arsenal. For reference here is the demi-tasse spoon I used to add the, less than a gram, of TCM to my mix.

Method:

Cut all of the ingredients into small pieces that will easily fit into a meat grinder.  I diced the skin into very small cubes, smaller than the meat and fat, because I didn't trust the KitchenAid grinder I was using to handle it.  Mix all of the ingredients together, except for the water, so they look something like this.







I let this sit overnight, but I don't think that is necessary, however it does have to be very cold when you grind it, so just thoroughly chill it. Then grind that stuff, I did two passes, again because the kitchen aid grinder wasn't too powerful. After passing everything through the grinder, put in two ice cubes to get out the remainder of the mix and chill the mix in the bowl. Then mix the sausage with your hand vigorously, really trying to smash and smear it into a uniform mass.  While you are doing this add the last two tbsp of water in two additions. The mix should be sticky and dense, not oily or broken. Like this!








The next few photos show how to tightly and uniformly wrap a sausage mixture in plastic wrap. I am basically making "bulk" sausage here, cooking and serving it without a natural or synthetic casing.
To narrate these photos:
Spread the mixture, more or less, in a uniform log onto the plastic wrap 1 inch from the edge nearest to you.
Take the 1 inch of extra wrap and roll it away from you until it touches the other side of the sausage mix. Then, being careful to get a tight roll, roll the entire log up, until all of the wrap is used.
This is the hardest and most important part: grab the sides of the wrap and pinch the sausage in towards the middle, then grab as close as you can to the sausage you have just moved in and roll the whole log away from you, keeping it in contact with the table the whole time. If the log moves away from you and does not roll then you need to increase the friction between the surface of the table and the wrap. A very light smearing of water, applied by running your hand under water, shaking it off and then rubbing your hand over the table surface works well for me, and it is fast and always available. Even better, if you are going to be doing a lot of these, mix sugar and water in a 1 to 3 ratio and smear a little of that on your counter-top. Alternatively, you could also twist the two sides in alternating directions in mid-air, but this method never makes as uniform, or tight a roll.
Once you get the sides rolled tight, without any air pockets in the sausage, use the extra wrap to tie a square knot.
Poach this for 1 hour at 60°C. I did this in a pot, with a Pampered Chef digital thermometer. Place directly into an ice bath after the hour is up and let the sausage fully cool before using.
















You can used this sausage for any number of applications, I will say that next time I am going to try doubling the amount of skin and fat in the sausage.  This version has a nice texture, but it is a little too brittle for my liking.
This is what it looks like fully cooked. Fairly lean. Look at the bits of skin!

I diced it and made ravioli filling. It was pretty good.
Now plate it up!


Sausage is fun and good to make at home.

All the best,
Adam