Hiya Folks... Just thought I would pop in and let you all know how our sausage making experience went over the weekend...
As most of you know, we stepped up to the plate and bought the 1 hp grinder from Cabelas. Can I just tell you that this machine is the best thing ever? We had 20 lbs of pork butt ground up in literally minutes. It took us longer to cube it to put it in the grinder than it actually took us to grind it. After it was all ground, we mixed the spices and put it back into the grinder for the stuffing process. It was a breeze! The toughest part, for us newbies to sausage making, was getting the natural hog casing on the sausage tube, but even that wasn't bad. I do have to tell you though, we had pork and sausage everywhere! We also discovered that this whole process works out alot better when the pork is really cold. It mauvers, handles and goes through the grinder much easier. The grinder did not skip a beat and did not jump around the counter one bit!
Now for the clean up... I have to tell you... I was dreading it. ::) It was a breeze... :) Everything is stainless and is dishwasher safe. Everything comes right apart and washes up nicely.
I would highly recommend this grinder to anyone!
As for the sausage, we made polish and jerk! For our first time making sausage, it is FABULOUS! ;)
Sounds great Mama!
I have to agree about the grinder. It's kinda like my son... You can't feed it fast enough! :D
Mike
Thanks for the report on the grinder. As far as getting the casings on the tube, I just got an email promotion from Sausage Makers, and in that email they have one or two tips. This week's email tip was how to load the casings on the tube. In the past I generally would just wet the tube and that would work for a while, but soon I would have trouble again. Their tip was to oil the tub with vegetable oil, and the casings would go on smoothly.
Ya know Habs... That is funny that you mention that... WE DID THAT! It actually does works out really well... However, when your hands are all lubed up, it is just a little "trying" to open the end of the casing and get it on there... Those little puppies get slippy! LOL ::)
Believe it or not...we use Crisco...seems to hold on better...or just the fat in the pork works too! Just rub our hands thru the meat mixture and slather the natural fat on the stuffer...casings slide right on (most of the time anyway)!! :)
You guys are still talking about sausage right?
Giz,
I think they are, at least they're practicing "Safe Sausage"
All you need now is a stand alone stuffer.
Now boys..... Of course, it is ALWAYS "safe sausage"... Not doing it right can certainly cause a mess.... :P
Thank SmokinHotMama;
Now that I know the oil will work, I'll give it a try.
Run some bread thru the grinder when done, Did u run the grinder parts thru the dishwasher, I did first time I used mine, blade, auger end and grinding plate rusted, Of course Cabelas gave me new ones, They have top notch customer service.
Thanks! Ya know what? I just heard that from someone I was chatting with last night... That is a great idea.. Thanks for the tip!
Carnie
What does the bread do? I'm assuming it aids in cleaning but thought I would ask.
Mike
Yeah, it does... it pushes the extra sausage through the tube... Slick idea....
I done that also.
I don't think the cost of the the bread is any less then the meat I would loose or not. But, it is easier to clean.
I wonder if there is any reason you couldn't use the same method with a stuffer?
Mike
I wrap a frozen cold wrap around the throat and bottom of the auger. This keep the friction down that causes the fat to melt.
Ya know the athletic freezer things you put in one of them elastic wraps
nepas
I put a little piece of bread in the spice grinder too after we use it...still not convinced enought to use the same grinder for coffee tho...but it does work enough to clean spices out so we can't really taste the last thing we ground in it.
Quote from: La Quinta on January 24, 2008, 07:53:50 PM
I put a little piece of bread in the spice grinder too after we use it...still not convinced enought to use the same grinder for coffee tho...but it does work enough to clean spices out so we can't really taste the last thing we ground in it.
Grinding rice works really good for cleaning your burr style spice grinder. You still won't be able to use it for coffee, but it does a great job removing traces of oil from the stronger spices, which if left in the grinder may ruin you next spice blend.
I'll try the rice Habs...thanks for the idea. We do grind a lot of spices for rubs and the like...some of them for currys are pretty potent and it gets tough removing them for another dish. Another tip from Iron Habs!!:)