Coriander Sausage Filling
Submitted by LaNore
Homemade pork sausage loaded with triple coriander: whole seeds, ground spice, and fresh cilantro. Includes step-by-step casing and linking instructions for DIY sausage makers.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
20 minREADY
40 minThree forms of coriander in one sausage. That’s the kind of bold move that separates homemade links from the grocery store stuff.
Whole coriander seeds bring crunch and pops of warm, citrusy flavor. Ground coriander builds a deep, earthy backbone. Fresh cilantro scattered through the mix adds a green, peppery brightness that hits your nose before you even take a bite.
Red pepper flakes and coarse black pepper round out the heat. Mix it all into ground pork shoulder by hand, stuff it into casings, and tie off links with butcher’s twine.
This recipe includes full casing prep instructions, from soaking to filling to linking, so even first-timers can get it done.
Pro Tips
- Keep the pork cold while mixing. Warm fat smears instead of staying in distinct pockets, which kills the texture.
- Run warm water through the casings before loading them onto the nozzle. It makes them pliable and easier to slide.
- Don’t overstuff. Leave a little slack so you can twist and tie the links without bursting.
- Grill, pan-fry, or smoke these. They’re versatile enough for breakfast plates, hoagies, or straight off the grill with mustard.
Ingredients
Directions
In a large mixing bowl, using your hand or a fork, combine all the ingredients for the filling.
Prepare casing, fill, link and cook.
Casing Prep:
Place the casings in a bowl of warm water in your kitchen sink. It will relax nearly instantly. Meanwhile set up the sausage grinder with the stuffing nozzle.
Take casings out of water and fit the open end over the faucet. Turn on warm water gently to allow the water to run through the casing.
Then remove casing and slide immediately over the sausage noxxel.
- Place the filling in the top of the grinder and crank the machine so that the filling feeds into the casing.
Continue cranking until entire casing is filled.
- Using butchers twine, tie a knot every 4 inches along the length of the sausage.
Cook as you like!
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