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Sausages: An Anthology (thelionandunicorn.wordpress.com)
55 points by autokill 8 days ago | hide | past | favorite | 7 comments





Ah, an ode to the sausage...

I'm a big fan, the problem is a lot of them are highly processed, very fatty and massively salty.

During the last few years I was in the UK there was more choice of 'good' sausages though, 97-100% pork sausages (Heck and some other brands I now can't find), some lower salt/less processed ("Naked") and lower fat ("Porky Lights") options. But in the end none of them is really very good for you.

Which is a shame, because they are delicious.

I still haven't got used to the default sausage here in Australia being beef.


> A sort of horrible soft stuff was oozing all over my tongue

Of course, a lot of modern sausages are exactly like this. If you can, you want to get your sausages from a proper pork butcher. I can recommend Curtis in Lincoln UK, particularly (not surprisingly) their Lincolnshire sausages - pork flavoured with sage and pepper. Redhill Farm Shop just down the street is also good for sausages. I guess we (Lincoln residents) are lucky to have such high quality high quality food shops so close together!


My favorite sausages on the west coast US is Wurstküche in Los Angeles. It’s less traditional and more California yuppy chic but the sausages are amazing.

My favorite are the duck and bacon sausages. They’ve also got some interesting ones like rattlesnake and rabbit and a vegetarian one called smoked apple sage with apple and yukon potatoes. They even used to have alligator sausages (those were real tough).

Their truffle fries and dipping sauces are to die for, too.


Delightful how Rudyard Kipling lived above Harris the Sausage King! "...for tuppence, gave as much sausage and mash as would carry one from breakfast to dinner when one dined with nice people who did not eat sausage for a living."

Would've been a good place for me to live as a young man as I grew up on sausage. The most common variety I ate was made by my Texan-Czech grandparents and other relatives. It often had venison and pork if someone had gone deer hunting recently enough. The venison was a nice touch but the pork helped it to be less dry. So delicious, and the archetype by which I measure all other sausage. The closest recipe I can find is from Prasek's Family Smokehouse in Hill (original Czech spelling is Prášek). They have multiple varieties, with and without jalapeño, but the all-beef and pork & beef have a flavor extremely close to the kind made by my relatives. I'm extra fortunate since you can now find them in HEB in Houston.

https://www.praseks.com


Leading with the Grange Hill sausage though. chef's kiss

The theme tune is now bouncing around my head. 'Chicken Man' by Alan Hawkshaw, for anyone interested.

Once, as a kid in the UK about thirty five years ago, I was watching ahem a movie for grown ups, and chicken Man provided the musical accompaniment to a scene.

Most discombobulating.




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