**Experience the Authentic Taste of Poland with Homemade Kielbasa: A Culinary Journey through Fresh Polish Sausage Delights**
Embark on a culinary adventure into the heart of Polish cuisine with our comprehensive guide to homemade kielbasa. Dive into the rich history and cultural significance of this traditional sausage, and discover the secrets to crafting your own fresh and flavorful kielbasa at home. Explore a variety of recipes, ranging from classic kielbasa to unique variations that tantalize your taste buds. Learn the art of seasoning, smoking, and cooking kielbasa to perfection, and savor the distinct flavors that make this sausage a beloved delicacy. Whether you prefer a spicy, smoky, or garlicky kielbasa, our detailed recipes provide step-by-step instructions to guide you through the process, ensuring a successful and delicious outcome. Get ready to impress your family and friends with this authentic taste of Poland, and discover the joy of creating your own homemade kielbasa.
KIELBASA, HOW TO COOK FRESH HOMEMADE KIELBASA
Should you make my Kielbasa, Homemade Kielbasa, Fresh Polish Sausage, Recipe #386789, this is a very good way to cook it. This is better even than simmering it in beer. Servings, of course, depend on the amount you are cooking! As to cooking time, remember, this is RAW pork; it requires sufficient cooking time.
Provided by Jezski
Categories Pork
Time 55m
Yield 8-10 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- If the kielbasa is frozen, thaw it a little. Place fresh kielbasa in pot with 1 quartered onion, several peppercorns, garlic cloves, 1 teaspoon marjoram (optional) and half a bay leaf. The addition of spices helps replace the seasoning that boils out during cooking.
- Add enough boiling water to cover.
- Cover and simmer on very LOW heat for about 50-60 minutes. Too rapid boiling may cause the sausage to burst. DO NOT prick sausages; they become dry. Let cool in cooking liquid.
- Sausage comes out moist and delicious, but not brown.
- Can be frozen after cooking. Wrap very well. Vac seal if you can.
HOMEMADE SWOJSKA POLISH KIELBASA
Steps:
- Grind pork, beef and pork belly/back fat on a medium size plate, 4.5mm (3/16") - 6mm (1/4").
- Add the ice water, all of the spices and mix well.
- Stuff into small size hog casings (28-32mm), tie into rings and hang to dry at room temperature for 2-3 hours.
- Preheat smoker to 140F, or 150F-160F max if your smoker can't get that low.
- Hang sausages in the smoker and dry for 30-60 minutes, until the skin is dry to touch. Then apply smoke for 3-4 hours.
- Remove sausages once the internal temperature has reached 154F. If the internal temperature is not rising too well after 3-4 hours of smoking, raise the temperature to 170F-175F. You may have to go to 195F if necessary. Alternatively, poach the sausages in 167F water for 25 - 30 minutes or until the internal temperature is at least 154F. Poaching is a much quicker and more effective method.
- Cool the sausage down and store in a refrigerator or a freezer.Cooling can be achieved by placing sausage in an ice bath to cool it down quickly. It with result in a fuller, more plump product.Alternatively, you may let the sausage cool down at room temperature and then refrigerate. This will result in the sausage less plump and slightly wrinkled, but this this is my preferred method. Ice water bath removes smoke residue from surface making the sausage less smoky in flavor and pale in color.A reader suggested another effective cooling technique - placing the sausage flat on a cool surface, like a counter top.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 735 kcal, Protein 64 g, Fat 51 g, SaturatedFat 18 g, Cholesterol 233 mg, Sodium 1975 mg, ServingSize 1 serving
KIELBASA, HOMEMADE KIELBASA, FRESH POLISH SAUSAGE
Posting as requested. We've perfected this recipe to OUR taste (very peppery and garlicky) over 20 years; my mother worked on it for years prior to that, even helping a Polish friend make it for a little Polish grocery store/butcher shop she owned. That said, we've found that it all works differently every year, depending on the quality of the meat, spices and casings. There's always SOME kind of problem! But it ends up remarkably consistent in taste. The directions are deliberately lengthy, the way I wrote them for a non-Polish non-sausage-making friend. And they're a little informal here and there. But DO read them through before you get into this project! Prep time and sausage-making time are actually just a couple of hours each day for 2 days. We use an electric grinder which forces the meat through a horn into the casing. Recipe #387079 is our favorite way to cook this kielbasa. Make this 3-4 weeks ahead, wrap very well, and freeze in vac packs. You can also cook it before you freeze it; we don't. We've kept this in the deep-freeze for several months with no loss in quality. Oh, and we call this fresh sausage because we don't smoke it. You certainly can do that, if you like the flavor.
Provided by Jezski
Categories Pork
Time P2D
Yield 12-14 lbs., 40-50 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Put the garlic through a garlic press or mince really fine. Put the seasonings into a small pot with a pint of water. Boil and then cool. Here's where my Mom always said taste it and I wouldn't. That could account for the variance in taste from year to year!
- Meanwhile, cut the pork off the bone. Cut into strips maybe 1" by 3". Doesn't have to be exact size, we get pretty sloppy with it. Strips go through the grinder better than chunks. Don't trim anything off, unless you just can't stand not to. Trust me, if there's not enough fat, the kielbasa will be dry and hard. DO trim off any bloody-type stuff though. We then put the meat into plastic dishpans, pour the cool liquid over, add about 4 cups ice cubes and mix together until your hands freeze. It should be kinda sloppy. If not, add more water or ice. Cover with aluminum foil or such and put in fridge over night to marinate so the meat soaks up the flavor. Stir occasionally. The ice will probably all be melted the next day before you make the sausage. The meat kind of absorbs the flavors. Yes, it will smell up the fridge. In fact, it will smell up the whole house! Open the windows. Make the neighbors crazy!
- Next day, take the casings out and soak in warm water for several hours; it makes them more flexible. Cut in 4 ft. lengths. Shove the meat in the freezer for 1/2 to 1 hour before you start. The meat stiffens up a little and it's easier to put through the grinder. (We forget to do this a lot!) Stick one end of each casing on the faucet and run warm water through the inside of the casing.
- Ready? (Keep everything as cold as you can) This is the fun part. Put a little oil on your hand and run it over the horn where the meat will come out. Run casing through fingers to drain slightly. Put a casing on the horn. One person helps push the meat through the grinder while the other holds the casing while it is filling up. It kinda curls up as you hold it. I find for me that it's better if I hold it up while it's filling, less pressure on the casing. We make each one about 12-16". Or until it splits! Tie it off with string or knot the end if you can get it close to the end of the filled casing. Some people twist it every 6" or so to make smaller sausages. If the darn thing splits, you gotta scrape out the meat, dump it back with the other stuff in the dishpan and start over. Some years you're lucky, but some years the darn things split all the time. That's one reason for soaking the casings for a longer time, they don't split as easily. Sometimes it's just a bad batch of casings. Then all you can do is swear at it.
- We put the coils of sausage back into clean dishpans (on a rack if possible) and put back into fridge to kinda dry overnight. Then we pack them in Saran, aluminum foil, ziplock bags, anything that will keep the smell in, and put the packages in the freezer. We make 2-3 lb. packages. Since I have a vacuum sealer, I use that. It works really great.
- By the way, the sausage is pale because it is not smoked. We don't care for smoked kielbasa. But you can smoke it before freezing. Can't help you with that, though!
- We've been able to keep the sausage frozen for months. Just keep everything cold and clean while you're working. Keep a lot of paper towels handy to dry hands, answer the doggone telephone, etc.
- We have found over the years, that pork has become much leaner now.That is sometimes a problem. We've considered buying more fat and mixing it in but never have. It worked out all right just not cutting off any fat. But insufficient fat makes for dry sausage.
- It takes up about 1-1/2 hours altogether to fill the casings. It's really simple and easy. Of course sometimes we have splashes on the walls when "someone" gets a little rough pushing the meat through the grinder. Hey, that's the fun of it. It's a messy job, but someone has to do it.
- Oh yeah, the house smells for 3-4 days. But it smells good. If you like garlic. All the seasonings are to your personal taste. You really need a lot of salt though. The pepper -- eh, how much do you like? We like a lot. Same with the garlic.
- We keep a little of the ground meat and cook a couple of small patties of the sausage. That's when you can taste it and find out what you did wrong in the seasoning, too late, of course.
- Use the plate in the grinder which grinds the meat coarse. It's better if the meat is a little chunky. You don't want a mealy texture.
- If you run a search on google, you can find other information under kielbasa.
- One recipe I found says to knead meat and seasonings. Supposedly the more you knead, the more tender the sausage. We've never tried that.
- In recent years, we've set aside 3-4 lbs. of the ground sausage meat and made it into small patties like breakfast sausage, and larger patties like hamburgers. The grandkids really like that. We do, too. But for Easter and Christmas, it has to be the links.
HOMEMADE POLISH SAUSAGE (KIELBASA)
This recipe sounds more like the fresh kielbasa we get from the Polish butcher than any other recipe I have come across. Unlike the smoked version, this needs to be cooked thoroughly. You can roast the kielbasa at 425°F for 45 minutes or simmer it in water for 30 minutes.
Provided by Lorac
Categories Meat
Time 2h30m
Yield 5 pounds, 20 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Soak casings in warm water.
- Using a coarse disk, grind meats and fat together.
- Add remaining ingredients and mix well.
- Stuff the casings, creating 18-24 inch links.
- Allow to dry 3-4 hours in a cool place or refrigerate uncovered for 24 hours.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 726.9, Fat 74.7, SaturatedFat 28.7, Cholesterol 83.4, Sodium 323.1, Carbohydrate 1, Fiber 0.5, Sugar 0.1, Protein 11.9
FRESH HOMEMADE KIELBASA
My hubby's grandmother was 16 when she came to the USA from Poland. This is her Kielbasa recipe which she handed down to her daughters. My M-I-L passed it on to me, and I am sharing it with you. The "2 hour" prep time may vary, depending on the stuffing/filling method you use. Note: The pork should NOT be too lean (75-85%), since the kielbasa gets its moistness and some of its flavor from the fat. Also, this recipe was "translated" from an old "pinch of this/that" recipe. Plesase adjust the spices/seasonings to your preference.
Provided by Dee514
Categories Pork
Time 2h
Yield 6 Pounds, 24 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- In a large bowl, mix all ingredients (including 2 cups warm water) until well blended.
- Soak casings in 6 cups warm water.
- Using about one foot of casing for one pound of meat mixture, stuff the casings.
- Keep unused casings wet while working, if they start to dry out, they will tear.
- Use in your favorite kielbasa recipes.
- Kielbasa can be frozen for later use.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 287.6, Fat 19.9, SaturatedFat 7.3, Cholesterol 88.9, Sodium 1249.8, Carbohydrate 0.9, Fiber 0.2, Sugar 0.3, Protein 24.6
Tips:
- Choose high-quality meat: Use fresh, lean meat for the best flavor and texture. You can use pork shoulder, pork butt, or beef chuck.
- Grind the meat coarsely: This will give the kielbasa a more rustic texture. If you don't have a meat grinder, you can ask your butcher to grind it for you.
- Use a variety of spices: Kielbasa is typically made with a combination of garlic, salt, black pepper, and marjoram. You can also add other spices, such as paprika, cumin, or caraway seeds.
- Mix the spices into the meat thoroughly: Make sure the spices are evenly distributed throughout the meat.
- Stuff the kielbasa into casings: You can use natural casings, such as hog casings, or synthetic casings. If you are using natural casings, be sure to soak them in water for 30 minutes before using them.
- Smoke the kielbasa: This will give it a smoky flavor and help to preserve it. You can smoke the kielbasa in a smoker or in your oven.
- Cook the kielbasa thoroughly: Kielbasa should be cooked to an internal temperature of 160 degrees Fahrenheit.
Conclusion:
Homemade kielbasa is a delicious and versatile sausage that can be used in a variety of dishes. It is perfect for grilling, frying, or baking. You can also use it to make soup, stew, or casserole. With a little time and effort, you can make your own kielbasa that is even better than store-bought. So, what are you waiting for? Give this recipe a try today!
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