DawnT
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Total Posts:
1284
- Joined: 11/29/2005
- Location: South FL
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Pickled Sausage and Hot Dogs
Mon, 04/25/11 12:55 AM
( permalink)
I recived a gift of a brick of 6/1 chicken and pork hot dogs today. We don't normally eat these kind of hot dogs and I figured this would be a good time to test some pickling brines that I'd like to try on sausages and get an idea what direction in the taste that I want to go and vinegar/water concentration. I started with a basic brine that I used last year for eggs and made up 3 1Q batches with the basic brine, red pepper flakes and another with red pepper flakes and pickling spice. All have a some peppercorns in the bottles. Brines went in warm after boiling and cooling down and in the fridge. Dogs cut in half. Film at the 28th I guess.
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Foodbme
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Re:Pickled Sausage and Hot Dogs
Mon, 04/25/11 3:29 AM
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Are the dogs skinless? If not, it might take a little longer to brine them.
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DawnT
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Total Posts:
1284
- Joined: 11/29/2005
- Location: South FL
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Re:Pickled Sausage and Hot Dogs
Mon, 04/25/11 3:46 AM
( permalink)
Cheap and skinless. These certainly qualify as cheap, formed, peaks,lips and every other orifice or waste meat beyond a cluck or a squeel. From what I understand these type of hot dogs will uptake a brine much better then an all beef frank and are great for proofing. Whatever come of this, I'd like it to transate to 4/1 type skinless bun sausages.
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Foodbme
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Re:Pickled Sausage and Hot Dogs
Mon, 04/25/11 4:20 AM
( permalink)
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DawnT
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Total Posts:
1284
- Joined: 11/29/2005
- Location: South FL
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Re:Pickled Sausage and Hot Dogs
Fri, 04/29/11 2:14 PM
( permalink)
Preliminary results for the above. I also made up two others with packaged beef hot dogs and sausages. Pork/chicken dogs in above brine Pork/chicken dogs in same brine with pickling spice added All beef packaged hot dogs 10/1 ? Hillshire packaged smoked sausages 6/1 Five days in. Final check is 2 weeks when the pickling should be about settled. The chicken/pork dogs barely have taken in any taste. The pickling spice addition is ok in taste, but rather unremarkable for dogs. The beef dogs have taken in quite a bit of flavor, but are quite dense and rubbery The Hillshire sausages seem to have the best texture, taste, and pickle absorbtion thus far. There has to be a better dog with probably a higher fat content which is what's taking in the taste. The sausages are winners here.
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