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RE: sausage

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What do you mean by " traditional beer or wine " ? I know a no-sulfites,

local-fruit, local-yeast winery in Michigan that makes some really excellent

blackberry-rhubarb and blueberry-rhubarb wines. ( and Sons is the

name, I think. It's just off I-94 near Kalamazoo).

Beer brewers use particular yeasts to particular effects, culturing their

own. This results in somewhat more complex situations (there was a Belgian

brewery that forgot to consider the effect of local yeast on their beer and

they used an open-vat brewing technique that is supposed to be relatively

more immune. When they moved, the beer was awful and they lost about a

years worth of business as they moved back). In some sense, any

microbrewery is likely to produce something " traditional " , whatever that

means.

Soren

> -----Original Message-----

> From: MegDCL@... [mailto:MegDCL@...]

> Sent: Friday, October 05, 2001 3:12 PM

>

> Subject: sausage

>

>

> Does anyone have a recipe for or a source of traditionally

> made sausage?

>

> I'm also interested in any info on making/buying traditional beer or

> wine.

>

>

>

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I have a book that has instructions and recipes for sausage and also

for beer. I haven't tried these recipes yet.

Stillroom Cookery, by Grace Firth

It's out of print, but you can find it used on Amazon and probably

from used book sellers. It was originally $9.95 and I've seen it

going for up to $15.00 US now.

Some of the recipes in the book have white flour, sugar etc., but

they are old recipes with instructions about how to do some of the

older things. I would think that substitutions would work.

Laurie

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A friend of mine is working on a recipe for fermented uncooked sausage. His

first batch was close but not quite right. He's done a lot of research

reading some very old cookbooks and meeting with individuals who remembered

grandparents hanging meet in the cellar to cure. It takes about 60 days once

it's hanging before it's time to consume it. If this batch works I'll ask

him if he would educate us all on the almost lost art!

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  • 6 years later...

>

> Some one posted in one of the groups asking about GF Sausage. New

York

> Style Sausage made in Palo Alto say that all of their sausages are

> gluten free. newyorkstylesausage.com They also are free of msg and

> preservatives.

>

> Mark

And they are delicious, too! The only brand I've

found that has NO chemicals in it. I buy the

breakfast sausage all the time. Safeway carries it.

Lori

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