Peppered Seafood Sausage
Submitted by cspencer
Peppered seafood sausage: fresh fish, shrimp, jalapeños, and cilantro ground together, stuffed into hog casings, and gently poached. A Southwestern take on fish sausage, bound with egg whites and brightened by cumin and lemon.
YIELD
1 batchPREP
40 minCOOK
20 minREADY
1 hrsThis is a serious cook’s project, the sort of technique you would learn in a restaurant kitchen, not grandma’s Sunday supper. Fresh fish fillets, shrimp, and jalapeños go through a meat grinder with cilantro, then get bound with egg whites, cumin, and lemon juice, and stuffed into hog casings the old-fashioned way.
Egg whites are doing the binding work here. No breadcrumbs, no pork fat. Just pure protein gluing the ground seafood together so the links hold their shape when you prick and poach them. That is what keeps these sausages light and unmistakably seafood-forward.
Cumin and fresh cilantro push the flavor Southwestern rather than Italian. A touch of lemon juice is the brightener. No pepper-heavy blend, just a clean heat from jalapeños ground right into the farce.
Poaching in barely quivering water is a must. Boiling will burst the casings or turn the delicate seafood rubbery. The water should barely shiver. Ten minutes cooking, ten minutes resting in the warm water, done.
Serve sliced on the diagonal over rice with a squeeze of lime, or cooled and chilled as a summer appetizer.
Pro Tips
- Keep the seafood, grinder parts, and mixing bowl ice-cold throughout. Warm seafood mush breaks easily and will not bind into a proper farce.
- Rinse the hog casings under cold running water to wash out the salt they are packed in. Then soak for 30 minutes before stuffing.
- Do not overstuff. A 1-inch diameter is right. Overfilled casings burst during poaching.
- Prick the finished sausage at 3-inch intervals with a sharp pin before poaching. This lets steam escape without splitting the casing.
Variations
- Use a mix of salmon, sole, and scallops for a more luxurious sausage with visible color streaks.
- Swap jalapeño for roasted poblano for a smokier, milder heat.
- Grill the poached sausage over medium-high for a minute a side to add char and smoke before serving.
Ingredients
Directions
Cut the fish into long strips; the shrimp and scallops can remain whole.
Put the seafood, jalapenos and cilantro through a coarse blade of a meat grinder.
Combine the ground seafood with the egg whites, lemon juice, cumin, salt and pepper in a large bowl.
Rinse the hog casing in cold water by letting the water run from the tap directly through it.
Gather the casing up onto the sauce stuffing funnel attachment on your meat grinder.
Put the seafood mixture back in the grinder and begin to grind it through.
When it begins to emerge from the funnel, tie the end of the casing in a knot, leaving 3 inches of it unfilled for expansion room.
Grind the mixture out, taking care not to overstuff the length of sausage; it should be about 1 inch wide.
If necessary, squeeze it gently with your hands to make this width as you work.
Continue with the entire length; you will have about 4 feet of sausage.
Remove the funnel and use your finger to press out the last remaining seafood mixture.
Leave 3 inches for expansion and tie the end in a knot.
Shape to make it even. Coil it into a spiral and set it aside.
Bring 1 inch of water to a boil in a large heavy skillet with a lid.
Reduce the heat so that the water barely quivers.
Prick the sausage with a sharp knife pint at 3-inch intervals.
Place it in the barely moving water, cover the pan and cook for 10 minutes.
Turn off the heat and let the sausage rest for 10 minutes before serving.
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