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Heres one for Nepas to try--Sausages in a Bird’s Neck

Started by devo, January 16, 2012, 05:20:39 PM

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devo

This was taken from
http://honest-food.net/wild-game/duck-goose-recipes




Categorize this under "hardcore wild game recipes." Making sausages using a bird's neck as a casing was something I "invented" a few years back when I was struck by how perfect a goose's neck would be as a sausage casing. But as the Romans put it, nothing is new under the sun. It seems the French do this around Gascony; I found a reference to the practice in Paula Wolfert's Cooking of Southwest France.

Why do this? Well for one, it uses a part of the animal that would otherwise go into the stockpot. But the real reason is because the skin on a bird can be surreally tasty, a combination of crispiness and fat that a regular hog casing cannot provide.

Different birds have different properties. There are three kinds in the picture above: The little round one in front is from The Unkillable Pheasant, the large one in the center is Holly's wild turkey, and the group in back are the necks from gadwall, mallards and pintail ducks.

Pheasant skin will crisp up easier than other birds, because it is thinner and it will have less fat than other birds. It's the functional equivalent of chicken skin, although pheasant skin is a little tougher.
Turkey skin is like a giant version of pheasant skin; the birds are related biologically. It can be tougher still, but makes the largest sausage.
Duck skin is thicker, and there is often a significant layer of subcutaneous fat attached to the inside of the neck skin. This is mega-yummy. The downside is the sausages tend to be small, about 4 inches.
Goose skin is best of all: It is exactly like duck skin, but long enough to make a proper sausage.
Here's how you prepare the necks for later when you want to make these sausages:

Pluck the bird right up to its chin. You want as much length as you can muster for the neck. Do not use necks that have the skin torn badly or that have holes in them.
Push the actual neck out of the skin; it will be attached by little fibers, but these pull off easily.
Remove the windpipe and any other organ-y looking bits from the skin. Wash it thoroughly inside and out.
Dry it well and lay it flat, or folded over once on itself. The skin retracts when removed from the neck, so you want it to be as long as possible. Wrap closely in plastic wrap and freeze, or vacuum-seal it. They will last this way in the freezer for up to a year.



When you want to make the sausage, you will need a sharp knife, some fine kitchen twine, a pair of scissors, and, of course, some sausage meat.

Start by tying off the narrow end of each neck with the twine. Tie it well in double knots!
Stuff sausage by hand or with a piping bag or a plastic bag with a corner cut out. Leave at least 1/2 inch space between the meat and the fat end of the neck.
Gather the fat end of the neck and gently squeeze the meat into the narrow end. You want to compress the meat into the sausage to make it pretty tight. Don't overdo this, though.
Tie off the fat end well with the twine.
Trim the string, then the loose ends of the neck skin with the sharp knife. Don't cut too close to the twine, but make it look presentable.
On to the cooking. The two keys to cooking these sausages are getting good color on the skin and slow cooking the insides. There are two ways to do this:

Gently brown the skin in a frying pan on medium heat. You will need a little fat to keep it from sticking; I like to use homemade duck fat. Then put the sausages in a 300 degree oven for about 15-20 minutes, depending on their size.
Leave a loop of kitchen twine at one end of the sausage and hang them in a smoker or an oven set at 300 degrees for about 45 minutes to an hour — more for a turkey sausage. This is my preferred method, as the smokiness really adds something to the sausage and you get an even browning.



What to stuff it with? Well, that's up to you. You can stuff them with any regular sausage meat, or you can get as exotic as you desire. I've stuffed mine with ground elk, regular pork sausage, and venison sausage, but I also like stuffing them with ground giblets of the ducks themselves to make a lovely garlic and sage-infused sausage. It's a hardcore stuffing, but if you're willing to use a neck as a casing, why not fill it with seasoned ground giblets?



NePaSmoKer

Quote from: devo on January 16, 2012, 05:20:39 PM
This was taken from
http://honest-food.net/wild-game/duck-goose-recipes




Categorize this under "hardcore wild game recipes." Making sausages using a bird's neck as a casing was something I "invented" a few years back when I was struck by how perfect a goose's neck would be as a sausage casing. But as the Romans put it, nothing is new under the sun. It seems the French do this around Gascony; I found a reference to the practice in Paula Wolfert's Cooking of Southwest France.

Why do this? Well for one, it uses a part of the animal that would otherwise go into the stockpot. But the real reason is because the skin on a bird can be surreally tasty, a combination of crispiness and fat that a regular hog casing cannot provide.

Different birds have different properties. There are three kinds in the picture above: The little round one in front is from The Unkillable Pheasant, the large one in the center is Holly's wild turkey, and the group in back are the necks from gadwall, mallards and pintail ducks.

Pheasant skin will crisp up easier than other birds, because it is thinner and it will have less fat than other birds. It's the functional equivalent of chicken skin, although pheasant skin is a little tougher.
Turkey skin is like a giant version of pheasant skin; the birds are related biologically. It can be tougher still, but makes the largest sausage.
Duck skin is thicker, and there is often a significant layer of subcutaneous fat attached to the inside of the neck skin. This is mega-yummy. The downside is the sausages tend to be small, about 4 inches.
Goose skin is best of all: It is exactly like duck skin, but long enough to make a proper sausage.
Here's how you prepare the necks for later when you want to make these sausages:

Pluck the bird right up to its chin. You want as much length as you can muster for the neck. Do not use necks that have the skin torn badly or that have holes in them.
Push the actual neck out of the skin; it will be attached by little fibers, but these pull off easily.
Remove the windpipe and any other organ-y looking bits from the skin. Wash it thoroughly inside and out.
Dry it well and lay it flat, or folded over once on itself. The skin retracts when removed from the neck, so you want it to be as long as possible. Wrap closely in plastic wrap and freeze, or vacuum-seal it. They will last this way in the freezer for up to a year.



When you want to make the sausage, you will need a sharp knife, some fine kitchen twine, a pair of scissors, and, of course, some sausage meat.

Start by tying off the narrow end of each neck with the twine. Tie it well in double knots!
Stuff sausage by hand or with a piping bag or a plastic bag with a corner cut out. Leave at least 1/2 inch space between the meat and the fat end of the neck.
Gather the fat end of the neck and gently squeeze the meat into the narrow end. You want to compress the meat into the sausage to make it pretty tight. Don't overdo this, though.
Tie off the fat end well with the twine.
Trim the string, then the loose ends of the neck skin with the sharp knife. Don't cut too close to the twine, but make it look presentable.
On to the cooking. The two keys to cooking these sausages are getting good color on the skin and slow cooking the insides. There are two ways to do this:

Gently brown the skin in a frying pan on medium heat. You will need a little fat to keep it from sticking; I like to use homemade duck fat. Then put the sausages in a 300 degree oven for about 15-20 minutes, depending on their size.
Leave a loop of kitchen twine at one end of the sausage and hang them in a smoker or an oven set at 300 degrees for about 45 minutes to an hour — more for a turkey sausage. This is my preferred method, as the smokiness really adds something to the sausage and you get an even browning.



What to stuff it with? Well, that's up to you. You can stuff them with any regular sausage meat, or you can get as exotic as you desire. I've stuffed mine with ground elk, regular pork sausage, and venison sausage, but I also like stuffing them with ground giblets of the ducks themselves to make a lovely garlic and sage-infused sausage. It's a hardcore stuffing, but if you're willing to use a neck as a casing, why not fill it with seasoned ground giblets?

Thats cool

I just might try it.

Kevin A

Quote from: NePaSmoKer on January 16, 2012, 05:23:25 PM
Thats cool

I just might try it.

Careful! you're one step away from making a HAGGIS at that point!
;D ;)

- Kevin

La Quinta

Absolutely fascinating...well done and delicious looking.

Waltz


ghost9mm

Well that looks real good, here in amish country we stuff a hog maul with just about anything but I prefer sausage and taters and a few other things...
Digital Bradley Smoker with Dual probe PID
The Big Easy with Srg grill
MAK 2 Star General
Char Broil gas grill