Pepperoni Sticks

Category: Main Dish

Cuisine: American

1 review 
Ready in 30 minutes

Ingredients

5 ts Ground anise

1 ts Allspice

3 tb Dry mustard

6 tb Salt

2 c Soy protein or nonfat dry

2 level ts PP#1

1 tb White pepper

1 pt Tabasco sauce

4 tb cayenne pepper 160;000 HU

10 lb Ground pork

6 oz Fermento or powdered

4 oz Molasses


Directions

I have 10 pounds of Pepperoni in the smoker as I type. Today is the first day that I used collagen casings... Always used sheep or pork casings in the past. This batch of pepperoni is going to be super hot, at a request of a female friend... She wants the whole batch, and she wants it to hurt at both ends of the dietary tract. The collagen casings have got to be the easiest things I have ever used in my life... they are already dry and ready to slide on the stuffing tube. I was worried that I would not be able to form loops, cuz they feel like paper and I was afraid that theyd be too brittle... Well, as soon as the first crank of the stuffer was in the casing, I knew Id never go back to the gut type, the moisture in the sausage makes it really pliable. This stuff is so easy to use, but tough enough to really pack meat into. It took only one tube to make 10 pounds. They are all uniform in diameter, and it was very easy to pack them to a consistent density. They are in the smoker and will be until tomorrow morning, then Ill be able to report on the finished products appearance. The recipe I used is a bastardized recipe from Rytek Kutas "Great Sausage Making Recipes and Meat Curing". It is bastardized due to the fact I add more to it, but still use the basic recipe... Season meat with the above spice, mix thoroughly, allow to sit overnight or 8 hours. Stuff into casings, allow to dry at room temp for 1 hour. Move to preheated 165 degree smoker and smoke until internal temperature is 145 degrees. Remove from smoker, use a cold water shower until internal temperature is less than 100 degrees. allow to come to room temperature then package up in whatever size "servings" that you want. I package them to the pound, so that when people want to buy them, its easier to come up with whole dollar figures Posted to bbq-digest by Jerry <g.m.fowler@worldnet.att.net> on Oct 02, 1999,

Reviews


The ingredients are cut off- and vague. PP is actually Sodium Nitrate ( curing salt ) formerly called Prague Powder #1, it's now called instacure #1. The option if you don't have Fermento ( a product used to give smoked sausages that "tangy" flavor which needs no time to ferment you can case sausages and smoke immediately ) is Powdered Dextrose, which does need time to ferment and give that underside of the tongue " tang'. I tried this recipe, and when I removed the sticks after hitting 145 degrees and showering in cold water until 85 degrees, the product was hardly finished at all and needed to go back into the smoker until it reached 150 degrees, then repeated the water bath. The flavor of the finished product is excellent- but I replaced the Anise seed with crushed Fennel seed and added 2 Tbs of granulated garlic. I said above that I'd use this recipe again- but with the changes I made with temperature and ingredients. I have been making sausages and smoking meats etc. for 18 years at home and I am familiar with Rytek Kutas and his books, he's a true MASTER of this culinary art.

Buckeyesmoker

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