Andouille Sausage~ Homemade

Ingredients

1 1/2 yards sausage casing
3 wide
1,000 gr pork
525 gr pork fat
28 gr garlic
18 gr salt
1 gr black pepper
1 gr cayenne
1 gr chili powder
1 gr mace
1 gr allspice
1 gr thyme
7 gr paprika
1 gr bay leaf
1 gr sage
5 colgins liquid hickory

Instructions

-smoke Andouille was a great favorite in nineteenth-century New Orleans. This thick Cajun sausage is made with lean pork and pork fat and lots of garlic. Sliced about 1 cm thick and greilled, it makes a delightful appetizer. It is also used in a superb oyster and andouille gumbo poplular in Laplace, a Cajun town about 30 miles from New Orleans that calls itself the Andouille Capital of the World. (about 6 pounds of 51 cm sausage, 3 to 9 cm thick) Soak the casing about an hour in cold water to soften it and to loosen the salt in which it is packed. Cut into 274 cm lengths, then place the narrow end of the sausage stuffer in one end of the casing. Place the wide end of the stuffer up against the sink faucet and run cold water through the inside of the casing to remove any salt. (Roll up the casing you do not intend to use; put about 5 cm of coarse salt in a large jar, place the rolled up casing on it, then fill the rest of the jar with salt. Close tightly and refrigerate for later use.) Cut the meat and fat into chunks about 1 cm across and pass once through the coarse blade of the meat grinder. Combine the pork with the remaining ingredients in a large bowl and mix well with a wooden spoon. Cut the casings into 66 cm lengths and stuff as follows: Tie a knot in each piece of casing about 5 cm from one end. Fit the open end over the tip of the sausage stuffer and slide it to about 3 cm from the wide end. Push the rest of the casing onto the stuffer until the top touches the knot. (The casing will look like accordian folds on the stuffer.) Fit the stuffer onto the meat grinder as directed on the instructions that come with the machine, or hold the wide end of the stuffer against or over the opeoning by hand. Fill the hopper with stuffing. Turn the machine on if it is electric and feed the stuffing gradually into the hopper; for a manual machine, push the stuffing through with a wooden pestle. The sausage casing will fill and inflate gradually. Stop filling about 3 cm from the funnel end and slip the casing off the funnel, smoothing out any bumps carefully with your fingers and being careful not to push the stuffing out of the casing. Tie off the open end of the sausage tightly with a piece of string or make a knot in the casing itself. Repeat until all the stuffing is used up. To cook, slice the andouille 1 cm thick and grill in a hot skillet with no water for about dozen minutes on each side, until brown and crisp at the edges.