Bratwurst
Wurst in the Best Way

There's nothing in the world that will wake you up quite the way a Gaulloises will. The nicotine punch is pretty fierce and the inevitable coughing fit will finish the job. Frankly, it's not my favorite breakfast. But it was sunup, I was in a tent somewhere between Salzburg and Munich, there was no coffee, I'd run out of English cigarettes, and the two guys I was with were French.
They were driving a funky little Renault and had picked me up just outside of Salzburg after the worst night of my life. As usual, I'd arrived in Salzburg to find the youth hostel was full: They were always full. I ended up in a building under construction to get out of the rain, hiding from the night watchman when he made his rounds, huddled on a cold and damp concrete floor, while the temperature dipped to near freezing. The next morning, frozen and exhausted, I just wanted to get out of town. It still took a few hours to get a ride, but the sun had come out and that and a cup of coffee made me feel a tad more connected to the universe.
Fast forward to today. As I've mentioned elsewhere, this is the year I start learning charcuterie and bratwurst were next on my list. My parents are coming over on Sunday for Father's Day and I thought homemade brats would make a good meal. Perhaps a bit traditional, but for my family traditional meals are unusual. Today I made the sausages.

There's nothing in the world that will wake you up quite the way a Gaulloises will. The nicotine punch is pretty fierce and the inevitable coughing fit will finish the job. Frankly, it's not my favorite breakfast. But it was sunup, I was in a tent somewhere between Salzburg and Munich, there was no coffee, I'd run out of English cigarettes, and the two guys I was with were French.
They were driving a funky little Renault and had picked me up just outside of Salzburg after the worst night of my life. As usual, I'd arrived in Salzburg to find the youth hostel was full: They were always full. I ended up in a building under construction to get out of the rain, hiding from the night watchman when he made his rounds, huddled on a cold and damp concrete floor, while the temperature dipped to near freezing. The next morning, frozen and exhausted, I just wanted to get out of town. It still took a few hours to get a ride, but the sun had come out and that and a cup of coffee made me feel a tad more connected to the universe.

Fast forward to today. As I've mentioned elsewhere, this is the year I start learning charcuterie and bratwurst were next on my list. My parents are coming over on Sunday for Father's Day and I thought homemade brats would make a good meal. Perhaps a bit traditional, but for my family traditional meals are unusual. Today I made the sausages.
BratwurstTomorrow I'm making rye buns to serve the brats in. I've got a bread recipe I've made before that needs tweaking and should make excellent bratwurst buns.
adapted from Bruce Aidells' Complete Sausage Book
1 1/2 lb pork butt -- cut into 1" chunks
1 lb veal shoulder -- cut into 1" chunks
1/2 lb pork fat -- cut into 1" chunks
1 tbsp coarse salt
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp ground black pepper
1 tsp ground mace
1 tsp ground caraway seed
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1/2 c milk
medium hog casings
Freeze pork, veal, and fat until slightly frozen -- about 1 hour.
Grind meats using the 1/8" plate. Add seasonings and milk. Mix thoroughly by hand, kneading and squeezing mixture to distribute ingredients evenly, or use the paddle attachment on your stand mixer, pausing occasionally to clear paddle.
Fry a small patty, taste, and adjust seasonings if needed. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate for a couple of hours.
Meanwhile, prepare 1+ meter of hog casings according to directions on the package. Tip: After thoroughly rinsing the inside of the casing with water, slip one end over the sausage stuffing horn and run a little bit of water into the casing through the horn, then you can easily slip the entire casing onto the horn.








11 Comments:
I am so, so impressed. I really should buy that meat grinder attachment for my Kitchen-Aid soon.
Anne,
You should, I use it about once a month.
Gorgeous, beautiful brats!
*dreamy sigh*
Man...wish I was your neighbor! I'd so be tryin' to mooch a couple of those!
S'kat,
Robert Redford ain't got nothin' on my brats.
Jeff,
If you were my neighbor I'd double the recipe and make you help stuff the damned things.
Hold my hand here, Kevin: Where would I buy the casings? And these brats, you don't age them, right? And since they're fresh sausages, you're not all anal about percentages and weights and stuff?
OK, I'm doin' it.
xx
Here's where I got the casings at
Eldon Sausage. I got the home pack there at the top of the page.
There's no aging, although they'll be better if you let the flavors meld for a day. And this is cooking, not baking so close is good enough, but do be sure you have enough pork fat, otherwise the sausages will have the texture of sawdust.
I've got a meat grinder attachment for my rig and only got it to work once. I do all the tricks, partially freezing the meat, cubed and even put the grinder attachment in the freezer. All I get is meat mayonaise.
Luckily though, I don't suffer. Taylor of Fatted Calf custom makes me stuff. Such as my Uncle Wiggly's Gootime Brats. They got fancy beer, red pepper flakes and 3 kinds of organic cheeses in them. Oh man, time for another 5 pounds worth.
Biggles
Doc,
I haven't had a lick of problems with texture -- although stuffing single-handedly presents some difficulty.
I'm working through the basics first -- Italian, brats, knnocks, anduoille -- while I learn about seasoning sausage. I figure next year I'll start getting fancy.
I would like to know the yield after cooking and the fat containt of the bratwurst. also whats the taste like,.
Gabycz,
Fat is listed in the recipe, and I don't know what you mean by yield in this case.
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