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 Beef & Old Windsor Ale Sausages © Denzil Green Poor old Sausages got a very bad rap in the English-speaking world towards the end of the 1900s.
First, the thinking went, Sausages were a cheap meat that has always been for poor people. Secondly, they were bad for you, full of fat and other nasty things. And thirdly, the only ones that were worth considering had Italian or German names.
In the last two decades of the 1900s, there were some cheap and nasty Sausages made when industrial Sausage makers ratcheted up the fat content to save money beyond the golden rule for Sausage of "half lean half fat meat". North American Sausages were reduced to small, thin, anaemic, breakfast Sausages in supermarkets from the 1950s through to the 1990s. These are the Sausages which gave all others a bad rap. You'll still hear vegetarians say veggie breakfast Sausages are just as good, "considering there's no 'real meat' in the meat ones, anyway".
In their haste to recover from the bad reputation brought on by those who pumped out low-quality Sausages for the past few decades, Sausage makers may in fact have overcompensated and cut back too much on the golden rule of thumb -- "half fat, half lean". Sausages don't produce enough of their own fat these days to fry up; some will sit in the frying pan and dry and shrivel before your eyes. When frying up Sausages these days, until you get to know them, fry them up in a knob or two of butter. This is where most North Americans will faint -- frying something fatty in butter? But that's just the point -- the fat has been reduced to the point where you have to add it back for the Sausages to cook without drying up entirely and sticking to the pan.
Consumers in North America and in the UK came to consider that only European-made or European-style Sausages were worth buying. Good English-named Sausages are now being made again, though mostly only in the UK where traditional styles and quality have been revived. North Americans wandering into the meat section of any supermarket in the UK look and weep.
There are a surprising number of websites dedicated to home Sausage making. These websites talk about making quality Sausages so you know what's in them. The websites show that poor old Sausage's bad reputation is still hanging around.
Sausages need either fat, cereals or a combination of both to bind the meat. European tradition tends to emphasize fat; English-speaking tradition tends to emphasize cereal. European Sausages tend to be cured, and have their meat more coarsely chopped.
Sausages can be fresh, cured or cooked. Fresh Sausages, of a Northern European tradition, need cooking. Most of these are intended to be eaten whole rather than as a sliced delicatessen meat.
Cured Sausages tend to be made in hotter climates to preserve the meat. They will be air-dried and/or smoked, and have saltpetre and / or lots of salt. Some cured Sausages can be eaten as they are; others need cooking. Many are intended to be sliced and used in pieces rather than eaten whole.
The cooked category of Sausages includes partly-cooked ones. Cooked Sausages are often par-boiled before sale, and sometimes are smoked as well. Many German Sausages are cooked, intended to be reheated before serving. Some such as Leberwurst are used as a meat spread.
Cooking Tips
When cooking a Sausage, never prick it -- juices will flow out and make the Sausage dry inside. Instead, use tongs, or a "flipper". The habit of pricking them during cooking stems from wartime cooking, when Sausages were full of fat, and you wanted to let all the fat run out before they practically exploded, splattering your nice new café curtains in the kitchen. Nowadays, most Sausages are better quality.
To keep thick Sausages moist, you can steam them in a bit of water in the frying pan so that the meat cooks inside without overbrowning the outside. The Sausages should be finished by a browning without the water. Pot Stickers use the same technique.
History
Sausages are nothing new. Sausages were first mentioned 3,000 years ago by Homer. Sausages were a way of both using up less-desirable meats, and of preserving them.
The Greeks and Romans ate them; the early Christians even banned them owing to their sexual suggestiveness.
Historically, the poor didn't even have access to meat, let alone Sausage, seasoned as it was with spices such as pepper and cardamom that used to cost a king's ransom up until the 1900s.
The Romans called Sausage "salsicia" (from their word, "salsus", meaning "salted"), and mixed pork with pine nuts, cumin seeds, bay leaves and black pepper, and their beloved liquamen. They brought Sausage making to Britain, and even though the English forgot how to do central heating, they remembered how to make Sausage.
Though sausages would certainly be made at home, by the 900s butchers were also selling them ready-made. Guilds in various towns would create their own recipes for their members to use, and thus regional sausages were born.
Sausages haven't historically always been cased up in links. In fact, you were more likely to make, or be able to get, loose Sausage meat (the situation is reversed, now.) The meat would be minced, spiced and salted, packed into ceramic pots, pressed down and sealed with a layer of melted fat. Sounds awfully close to something French, doesn't it? A cloth dipped in wax would then be tied around the mouth of the pot, and it would be stored in the cellar for months, being used as needed.
Links had the advantage that they could be cured (in smoke), which better prevented spoilage.
Language Notes
The word "sausages" comes from "salsus", meaning salted.
Also called: Saucisse, Saucisson (French) Wurst (German) Salsiccia (Italian) Salchicha (Spanish) Botulus, Salsicia (Roman)
See Also
Kitchen Tongs, Pot Stickers
Other entries for Sausages
Aberdeen Sausage, Andouille Sausage, Andouillette, Baloney, Boudin Blanc à l’Oignon, Boudin Blanc Creole, Boudin Blanc, Boudin Vert, Bratwurst Sausage, Braunsweiger, Caña de Lomo, Chaurice, Chipolatas, Chorizo (Mexican), Chorizo (Spanish), Chouriço Sausage, Cumberland Sausage, Dampfwurst Sausages, Deerfoot Sausages, Glamorgan Sausages, Haslet, Lincolnshire Sausage, Linguiça, Lorne Sausage, Luganega Sausage, Medisterpolse Sausage, Merguez Sausage, Morcón, Pan Sausage, Potato Korv, Rag Sausage, Sausagemeat, Sausages, Sobrasada Sausages, Texas Hot Gut Sausages, Thuringia Bratwurst, Tube Sausage, Weißwürste, White Hots, Wieners, Zwyczajna Sausage, Zywiecka Sausage
Other entries for Meat
Affettati, Beef, Buffalo, Cap On / Cap Off, Game, Goat, Institutional Meat Purchase Specifications, Minced Meat, Offal, Paillards, Pork, Potted Meats, Poultry, Prosciutto di Pietraroja, Roasts, Sheep, Steak, Veal, Venison, Yak
Related Recipes
Currywurst, Roasted Sausages and Leeks, Rosemary & Onion Cocktail Sausages
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