Country Sausage
Submitted by DEERMAN115
Homemade country sausage patties with sage, black pepper, and a hint of brown sugar. Six-ingredient breakfast sausage you mix, shape, and pan-fry. No casings required.
YIELD
8 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
10 minREADY
30 minCountry sausage made the old-fashioned way: ground pork seasoned with sage, black pepper, a kick of red pepper flakes, and just a whisper of brown sugar to balance the bite. No casings, no curing, no sausage stuffer required. You mix it, shape it, and fry it like a hamburger patty.
The sage is what makes this taste like proper breakfast sausage instead of plain seasoned pork. Don’t skimp on it. The brown sugar isn’t there to make the patties sweet either. It rounds out the salt and pepper and helps the outside caramelize as the patties hit the hot skillet.
Mix the seasonings into the meat with your hands but don’t overwork it, or the patties turn dense and rubbery. Once shaped, let them rest in the fridge for at least 30 minutes if you have time. The seasoning blooms and the sage flavor settles in properly.
Kitchen Tips
- Use ground pork with some fat content. Truly lean pork gives dry, crumbly patties
- Mix gently with cold hands. Warm hands and heavy mixing make the fat smear and the texture turn tough
- Make and freeze ahead. Stack patties between parchment squares, freeze, and cook from frozen straight in the skillet
- Start in a dry skillet. The pork renders enough fat on its own
Variations
- Add a pinch of dried thyme or marjoram for a more complex herb profile
- Maple-sweet version: swap brown sugar for a tablespoon of maple syrup
- Spicier kick: double the red pepper flakes and add a pinch of cayenne
Ingredients
Directions
Mix all ingredients well.
Shape into eight 4 inch diameter patties.
Heat large skillet over medium heat.
Add sausage patties, four at a time, and cook until browned, about five minutes per side.
Transfer to a plate lined with paper toweling.
Keep warm while cooking remaining patties.
Discard fat.
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