Homemade Weisswurst Sausage

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5

10 reviews
Excellent

Homemade Weisswurst Sausage

Homemade Weisswurst is a traditional pale sausage made from finely ground white meat such as pork, veal, or poultry, mixed with spices, parsley, and lemon zest. The meat and bacon ends are combined with seasoning and carefully ground twice, then blended with ice water for a cohesive texture. Hog casings encase the sausage mixture, which is cooked gently to preserve its delicate flavor and texture.

Description

This Weisswurst sausage recipe emphasizes a blend of white meat and fatty pork or bacon ends, seasoned with salt, parsley, mustard powder, ginger, white pepper, mace, cardamom, and fresh lemon zest for subtle aromatic complexity. The onions are softened without browning to maintain sweetness. The meats are ground twice for a fine, uniform texture and chilled to keep the mixture cold, essential for proper binding.

Ice water and optional carrot fiber (C-Bond) are incorporated to help bind the sausage, resulting in a smooth and tender but firm bite typical of Weisswurst. The mixture is packed into hog casings, which hold their shape during gentle cooking. This technique produces a delicate sausage that is flavorful without overpowering spices, ideal for traditional servings.

The recipe yields about four pounds of sausage and can be scaled up as needed. The sausages are best cooked gently to keep their pale color and soft texture intact, making them suitable for simmering or poaching.

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Ingredients

Servings
  • 1 tablespoon lard or vegetable oil
  • 1/2 cup onion white, minced
  • 3 pounds white meat pork, veal, turkey, rabbit, chicken
  • 1 pound bacon ends or fatty pork shoulder
  • 20 grams salt about 2 tablespoons plus a teaspoon
  • 1 tablespoon parsley minced
  • 1/2 teaspoon dry mustard powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon ginger powdered
  • 1/2 teaspoon white pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon mace
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom
  • lemon grated zest
  • 1 teaspoon C-Bond carrot fiber (optional)
  • 1 cup water ice
  • Hog casings

Instructions

  1. Heat the lard in a small pan and cook the onions until soft. Do not brown them. Let them cool to room temperature, or refrigerate them. This can be done up to a day in advance.
  2. Optional Step: Cut the meat and bacon ends into chunks and mix with the salt. Refrigerate overnight in a closed container. Doing this helps the bind, but is not 100% needed.
  3. Soak about 10 feet of hog casings in warm water.
  4. When you are ready to grind, mix the meats, salt, parsley, spices and lemon zest. Grind through a coarse or medium die. Put the mixture in the freezer while you clean up, or, if the meat is still below 40°F, grind again through a fine die, at least 4.5 mm and ideally 3 mm. This time, definitely put the meat in the freezer while you clean up.
  5. Once the meat is at about 34°F, put it in a large bowl with the water and C-Bind, if you are using it. Mix this with your clean hands for about 90 seconds, or until the mixture binds together as a cohesive mass that you can pick up in one glob. Your hands should hurt from the cold.
  6. Put a length of casing on your sausage stuffer and fill it with the weisswurst. Crank out one large length of sausage, leaving about 3 to 5 inches of "tail," unfilled casing, on either end. You don't want to fill the casings overly tight just yet. Repeat this process until you have all the sausage in casings.
  7. Get a large pot of water hot, about 160°F.
  8. To form links, pinch off a link of about 6 inches long at one end of the length. Spin it away from you to set the link. Now move down the length and pinch off another link, but this time spin it towards you. Keep doing this, spinning in alternate directions, until you get to the end of the length. Doing this helps prevents the links from coming apart. (This video shows how I do it.) Tie off the ends.
  9. Now, to tighten them, get a clean needle or sausage pricker. Gently compress the meat in each length, spinning it a little more in the direction you first spun. You will see air pockets. Prick the casing to remove them, again gently compressing the links to fill the casing. Do this for every link.
  10. Carefully lower the weisswurst into the hot water. They will want to unspin a bit so watch for that. Poach them gently for 20 minutes or so. While they are cooking, fill a large basin with ice water. Dunk the links in this ice water after they've cooked. Leave them there for 10 minutes. Pat them dry and you are ready to go. They will keep for about 5 days in the fridge, and can be frozen.

Notes

  • This recipe yields approximately 4 pounds of sausage and quantities can be increased as desired.

Nutrition Information

Show Details
Calories 158kcal (8%) Carbohydrates 1g (0%) Protein 32g (64%) Fat 3g (5%) Saturated Fat 1g (5%) Trans Fat 1g (50%) Cholesterol 88mg (29%) Sodium 547mg (23%) Potassium 118mg (3%) Fiber 1g (4%) Sugar 1g (2%) Vitamin A 22IU (0%) Vitamin C 1mg (1%) Calcium 25mg (3%) Iron 2mg (11%)

Nutrition Facts

Serving: 16servings

Amount Per Serving

Calories 158 kcal

% Daily Value*

Calories 158kcal 8%
Carbohydrates 1g 0%
Protein 32g 64%
Fat 3g 5%
Saturated Fat 1g 5%
Trans Fat 1g 50%
Cholesterol 88mg 29%
Sodium 547mg 23%
Potassium 118mg 3%
Fiber 1g 4%
Sugar 1g 2%
Vitamin A 22IU 0%
Vitamin C 1mg 1%
Calcium 25mg 3%
Iron 2mg 11%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.

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