BRADLEY SMOKER | "Taste the Great Outdoors"

Smoking Techniques => Sausage Making => Topic started by: NePaSmoKer on January 20, 2009, 07:07:10 AM

Title: Chorizo
Post by: NePaSmoKer on January 20, 2009, 07:07:10 AM
Makes 10 pounds.

You need the following.

7 lbs of lean meat
1 1/2 lbs prok butt
1 1/2 lbs pork fat  (very important)
4 T salt
2 T paprika (hot is ok too)
3 T cayenne pepper
2 T black pepper (if you can try to use fresh cracked)
3 T garlic granules
1 T mexican oregano
1/4 cup dextrose
1/3 cup vinegar (red wine if you have it)
33-36mm hog casings (opt)


1. Grind meat thru med plate 1 time.
2. Mix meat with the rest of the ingredients, mix by hand or mixer.
3. Stuff into casings, make into patties or crumble into your fav dish.

This is  fresh bulk chroizo. If your wanting to smoke it you must add cure to it.  Cure for this is 2 teaspoons.

Use withing 3 days or freeze double wrapped for 6 months.

enjoy

nepas
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Mr Walleye on January 20, 2009, 10:58:41 AM
This sounds great NePas!

Thanks for sharing all your wonderful recipes!  ;)

I have problems getting Mexican oregano around here. I'm just curious if you know how difference there would be using regular oregano.

Thanks
Mike
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: La Quinta on January 20, 2009, 06:57:48 PM
I agree with Fishman...we can get Mexican oregano....but what is the difference? Is it a flavor thing? We have both Italian and Mexican, and frankly, use the one that is going "old" first....is that a mistake?  ???
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Habanero Smoker on January 21, 2009, 01:47:56 AM
For me Mexican oregano has a much more pungent taste. It also seems to have a hint of cilantro flavor.
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Caneyscud on January 21, 2009, 05:45:58 AM
The two oreganos are both taxonomically and botanically different.   Greek or Italian oregano used to be listed as origanum majorana (hence the debate and controversy between oregano and marjoram).  Now Greek/Italian oregano is listed as origanum vulgare (vulgare meaning is "common") and the Mexican oregano is listed as lippia graveolens(Verbenaceae) and is more closely related to Lemon Verbena than to Greek/Italian oregano.  A quick look at the plants shows the difference.  There are others plants that are referred to as oregano in Mexico - and I have seen the plants for sale - but this is the one most commonly found in the US as being Mexican Oregano.  I agree with Habs about the taste.  It is more pungent - some use it as a substitute for epazote leaves.  It has a more "earthy" flavor less "minty" than oregano when fresh - dried I dunno.

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Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Caribou on January 21, 2009, 06:33:56 AM
Thanks Nepas for posting another great recipe for us.
Where does one purchase dextrose?
Thanks,
Carolyn
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: carnie1 on January 21, 2009, 07:05:08 AM
Quote from: Caribou on January 21, 2009, 06:33:56 AM
Thanks Nepas for posting another great recipe for us.
Where does one purchase dextrose?
Thanks,
Carolyn
Most any supply house , Here are a few http://www.midwesternresearch.com/INDEX.htm (http://www.midwesternresearch.com/INDEX.htm)
http://www.butcher-packer.com/ (http://www.butcher-packer.com/)
http://www.alliedkenco.com/catalog/index.php (http://www.alliedkenco.com/catalog/index.php)
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Gizmo on January 21, 2009, 09:41:27 PM
Carolyn,
Is that a Rhode Island Red holding your daughter?  :D
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Caribou on January 22, 2009, 04:27:48 AM
Hi Gizmo!
That chicken is my daughter's Buff Orpington rooster "John" he is a big teddy bear of a bird.
My hubbie bought two chicks last spring to replace two we lost.
The chicks were supposed to be both girls but John was one of them.
Carolyn
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Gizmo on January 22, 2009, 06:08:09 PM
Ah,
It reminded me of one (a Red) of the two I raised until they were too big to keep in town.  Had to take them out to my aunt and uncle's farm.   
The red was male and a smaller one was a hen.  The red got a bit mean after the hen died.
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Caribou on January 22, 2009, 08:45:00 PM
Gizmo,
We hatched some eggs last summer and had a couple roosters from that group of youngsters that were just plain mean.
They both tasted great. ;)
Carolyn
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Gizmo on January 23, 2009, 08:02:01 PM
Mine was real tough.  I chased it for an hour trying to catch it.  We were out on the farm and I wanted to play with my pet chicken.  It came at me feet first when it reach me, and latched it claws into my belly.  My aunt had to catch it for me as I wasn't fast enough.  :-[
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Caribou on January 23, 2009, 08:19:50 PM
Oh no Gizmo!  Sounds like you got belly spurred! :(
When it came down to me ridding myself of my two roosters and wasn't worried about doing the plucking and cleaning of them because we hunt birds often.
I was afraid of the slaughtering part.  I put the two roosters in a doggy exercise pen and asked my hubbie to shoot them with a 22, but he wasn't up to it either.
So I went online to some county extension website that showed me how to slaughter humanely and how to process the birds afterwards and it was so easy I was amazed.
I'm so used to cleaning game birds that have shot in them, etc, that it was like a dream to clean birds that had been properly bled out and were not shot up.
They were 3 month old birds so they were tender and great to eat.
I think I am going to get some meat chickens this spring and raise them for the table.  I love knowing where my food comes from. :)
Carolyn
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Gizmo on January 23, 2009, 08:55:27 PM
My aunt used a hatchet and hot water bath.  The hatchet did all that needed to be done.  Don't know if things are different these days.  Those were the simple days of old.  Probably get thrown in jail these days for even thinking about cutting the heads off. 
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Buck36 on January 23, 2009, 09:50:13 PM
Quote from: Gizmo on January 23, 2009, 08:55:27 PM
My aunt used a hatchet and hot water bath.  The hatchet did all that needed to be done. 

My Dad did ours this way when I was a kid. I remember the first time I watched the whole process like it was yesterday. I didn't know they "ran" after hatchet did its' work. It was an eye opening day for a kid and one that will still make my Dad laugh today.
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Caribou on January 24, 2009, 05:52:39 AM
Oh a lot of folks I talk to still do the hatchet thing!  Still very PC here in North Idaho :D
I read if you hang them up side down by their legs they go into a transe.  So that's what I did and tied their legs together with bailing twine so I could hang them by their legs.  Just nick their neck with a very sharp knife and wha la.
No running around and very little flopping.  I like raising my own animals to eat but they have to live very happy lives while under my care and be slaughtered in the least tramatic way.
This Chorizo thread is taking a very macabre turn! ;)  But I figure if you own a Bradley Smoker chances are you probably are a carnivore! ;D
Carolyn
Title: Re: Chorizo
Post by: Caneyscud on January 26, 2009, 06:48:59 AM
Quote from: Buck36 on January 23, 2009, 09:50:13 PM
Quote from: Gizmo on January 23, 2009, 08:55:27 PM
My aunt used a hatchet and hot water bath.  The hatchet did all that needed to be done. 

My Dad did ours this way when I was a kid. I remember the first time I watched the whole process like it was yesterday. I didn't know they "ran" after hatchet did its' work. It was an eye opening day for a kid and one that will still make my Dad laugh today.

Don't know why that seemed unusual - there's lots and lots of people who walk around as if their head is chopped off!  And the ones that don't, well they walk around with their head stuffed in a place where the sun don't shine!  Now that's an unusual gait! ;D

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