How To make Highland Sausage Roll
10 oz Venison (trimmed weight)
6 oz Belly of pork (trimmed wt.)
2 oz Pitted prunes
1 sm Onion
Remains of a pot of tea 3 tb Port
Allspice, thyme or Worcester 1 lb Ready-made puff pastry
Beaten egg to glaze Mince the meats fairly finely, chop the onion very finely and mix together. Season with a good grinding of pepper - but no salt - and some allspice, thyme or a few shakes of Worcester sauce. Pour on the port and mix well, then cover and leave for several hours or overnight to allow the flavours to blend. Cover the prunes with cold tea and leave to soak for several hours. Season the sausagemeat with salt and roll it into a long, fat sausage shape. Roll the pastry out to a rectangle and lay the "sausage" down the length of it. Lay the whole drained prunes on top of the meat. Damp one long edge with beaten egg, roll up carefully and seal. Alternatively you may like to enclose the sausage in a decorative pastry plait. In this case, roll the pastry out to a square, lay the "sausage" down the centre and place the whole drained prunes on top. Cut the pastry diagonally into 1/2-inch strips on either side of the meat. Damp the end of each pastry
strip with beaten egg then fold the strips alternately from each side, over the meat to create a plait effect. Seal the pastry ends. Slide the pastry parcel on to a damp baking sheet and glaze the top. If you have made a sausage roll, decorate it with pastry leaves and make one or two steam slits in the top of the pastry. Bake at 425 F (220 C) gas mark 4 for a further 25 minutes or so. Source: Philippa Davenport in "Country Living" (British), November 1988.
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The recipe -
Serves 4
1-2 lb boneless leg of lamb, cut into 1 inch pieces
1/4 cup vegetable oil
4 large carrots, peeled and cut into 1 inch chunks
2 large onions, peeled, halved and sliced
3 large parsnips, peeled and cut into 1 inch chunks
1 rutabaga (swede) peeled and cut into cubes
2 sprigs fresh thyme
2 cups (about 10) small gold potatoes, cut in half
2 quarts lamb broth (or chicken or beef broth)
salt and pepper to taste
1/4 cup fresh chopped parsley
Add the oil to a large pot and heat until smoking. Carefully add the lamb and stir until brown. (drain off the fat - optional)
Add the vegetables and stir (don't add the potatoes until half way through cooking)
Add the thyme and broth, cover with a lid and simmer for 1 hour or until the meat is tender. Season with salt and pepper and serve.
Garnish with the chopped parsley.
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How To Cook Sausages - Boil n Burn Method - Super Results - Sausage Recipe
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How To Cook Sausages - Boil n Burn Method - Super Results - Sausage Recipe - For years i have been cooking my sausages all wrong, burning them on the outside to ensure the middle is cooked and pocking the life out of them, which is a big no no. This method that i call boil n burn works a treat every time. Give it a go. Methods of cooking perfect sausages Boiling first This method is one of my favourites as it helps seal all the moisture and flavour in. As well as water you could boil in beer (this was a particular favourite of ours when testing the methods.) as the ale really does add an extra depth to the flavour. Put your beer or water on and bring to the boil. Then reduce to a simmer and put the sausages in, making sure they are covered. Check with the probe after about 10-11 minutes. Once at 75oc remove and fry or grill on a high heat very quickly until brown. Oven cooking I never used to like sausages cooked in the oven until I started putting water with them. Place a small amount of water in an oven dish and then put sausages on a resting rack. Place the rack with sausages in the oven dish. The water should not be touching the sausages. It is just there to help steam while cooking. Cook on about 160oc (fan assisted oven) for 15-20 minutes and then check to see if at 75oc. If not brown you can always increase the temperature for a couple of minutes. Frying This will give a more greasy sausage but one with great flavour. With frying it’s all about being gentle. Put a very small amount of oil in the pan or with a good non stick pan you can cook without. A little fat should come out of the sausages to cook them in, but not too much. If the pan ends up full of fat and water they are not great sausages. Remember, life’s to short to eat cheap sausages! I cook mine on a medium heat turning occasionally for 22 minutes. When probed they were perfect! Grilling Grilling is a good way if you like the skins crisp. Again don’t cook on a high heat and only turn occasionally, probing after 15 minutes. Never prick a real sausage When cooking a ‘real’ sausage you should never prick it. It was common to prick sausages due to the bad state of the industry after the Second World War. As a result of rations sausages were full of bread and water to the point, where they would expand and explode when cooked, hence the name ‘bangers.’ Unfortunately after the war butchers saw it as a way to maximise profits, and kept the low meat content. As part of the HOW TO COOK GREAT NETWORK -
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