1/4 tsp. saltpeter
1 tsp. espices fines (see recipe below)
1/4 cup cognac
1/4 cup chopped Pistachio nuts
1 small clove garlic, mashed
1/4 tsp. white pepper
3/4 tsp. sugar
1 Tbsp. salt plus 1 1/2 tsp.
Sausage casings
Mix all ingredients
well. Stuff into casings using a sausage
stuffer. With cotton kitchen twine, tie
into links about 5 to 6 inches long.
Hang sausages up in a dry airy place where temperature is generally
around 70 degrees and rarely over 80 degreees. After
two to three days, cook or freeze.
Espices fines:
1 Tbsp. each: crumbled
bay leaf, clove, mace, nutmeg, paprika, thyme
1 1/2 tsp. each: basil, cinnamon, marjoram or oregano, sage,
savory1/2 cup white peppercorns
To cook sausages, poach
in water to cover just below simmering for 25 minutes. Remove from liquid and cool on paper
towels. Peel off casings. Roll in fresh white bread crumbs, pressing
crumbs in place with your fingers.
Arrange in a buttered baking dish and dribble with droplets of melted
butter. Broil slowly, turning and
basting with fat in pan several times, for 10 to 12 minutes until nicely
browned. Arrange on a bed of hot mashed
potatoes and serve at once.
When the boys were young, we would have a pig butchered and then make a lot of sausage. We always made Polish sausage and many times German sausage. This French sausage, which was one of the best we tried, is a Julia Child recipe. The weirdest sausage we tried was an Italian sausage called Cotechina which is made mostly with ground pork rind. You'll notice I didn't include that recipe.
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