How to cook a sausage ..

I’m very bossy and opinionated on the subject of sausages.

I buy mine in natural casings and from a butcher who loves making them – and that’s important.  Sausages have always been a ‘suspect’ product.  The Victorians called them ‘little bags of mystery’ because there was no way of knowing what might have been put inside.

Sausages 1

What there will be, in a great sausage, is fat.  Yes, I know.  Fat makes you fat, but you should know this isn’t a healthy eating option and there’s not a lot of point in pretending it is.  For me, that means I buy quality sausages and I eat them occasionally.  There really are few pleasures in life to compete with a sausage sandwich – cooked properly.  (Told you I am bossy on this subject.)  I don’t want to risk my arteries on a dried up/burnt/suspiciously undercooked/greasy sausage.

Sausages 2

If I’m going to eat it – and I am – it’s got to be good.  Having selected a good quality, well seasoned sausage with a nice balance of meat and fat .. don’t prick it.  There’s absolutely no need to do it and every reason not to.  If you pierce the skin all those wonderful juices will end up in your frying pan and you’ll be left with a dry sausage.

The whole ‘first prick your sausage’ came about after the outbreak of the first world war.  With meat in short supply sausages were stuffed with whatever scraps were available.  To that was added cereal and water to bulk them out.  When the soldiers cooked them on shovels set over open fires they spluttered and burst.  They no longer do that, but ‘banger’ is still slang for sausage.

Beans, bangers and mash

Beans, bangers and mash being a staple of British culinary life .. and where I was headed today.  ‘Beans’ being my homemade baked beans which I slow cooked overnight.  ‘Mash’ being the buttery mashed potatoes and the ‘bangers’ meaty pork sausages.  My youngest has a heavy cold and this is medicine on a plate.  Pure comfort food.

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In my very opinionated opinion, there are two ways to cook a sausage.  The first is s-l-o-w-l-y over the lowest of low heats.  Put some groundnut/sunflower oil in a frying pan and set it on a low heat.  You’ll need to watch it and constantly turn the sausage so it cooks evenly.  There’s no rushing this – a fat sausage will take between 25 and 30 minutes.

My preferred method is to first poach my sausage.  Set a pan of water over a high heat and bring it to a boil.

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There is really no way of making this photogenic.  Put the uncooked, separated sausages in the water.  Reduce the heat and let them poach at a gentle plop for 10 minutes.

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When their time is up, remove them to a plate.  What you have now is a cooked, but visually unappealing, sausage.

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Pat it dry as water will spit when it comes into contact with the oil in the frying pan.

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Put some flavourless oil in the bottom of the frying pan.  (No, you can’t grill them.)

What you are doing now is browning the outside.  There’s no risk of the outside being done before the inside is cooked so this method allows you to turn the heat up.  I fry mine over a medium to high heat.

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Turn in the oil so all sides colour evenly.

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Never again will you allow anyone to cremate a beautiful sausage on a barbecue.  When it’s coloured to your liking, lift out of the frying pan and drain on kitchen paper.

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And, that’s it.  How to cook a sausage.

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Eat.

Sausages 12How To Cook A Sausage

  • Sausages – the best you can find and from a supplier you trust.

Bring a saucepan of water to a boil.  Reduce the heat and add the raw sausages.  Poach at a gentle simmer for 10 minutes.  Remove the sausages from the water and allow them to cool slightly.

Put some flavourless oil in a frying pan and place over a medium-high heat.

Pat the sausages dry with kitchen paper.  Then, add them to the frying pan.  Fry until all sides of the sausage is coloured to your liking.

Remove from the frying pan and allow excess grease to drain away.

Eat.

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Kedgeree

And .. this is why I’ve been posting about curry powder, crispy fried onions and hard boiled eggs.  I made Kedgeree for Sunday brunch.

Kedgeree served

I must apologise for the lack of mahogany buffet-serving dresser and Victorian silver chafing dish in my photographs …  Standards have slipped since the days of the Empire.  Not that my antecedents seem to have ventured much beyond 100 miles of London and, sadly, there is no family silver to inherit.

But .. Kedgeree.  In the normal run of things, this is more likely to be supper in my house.  I doubt even my grandparents would have whipped up a batch for breakfast … although, thinking about it, my Dad’s mum may well have done as she was in service.

This was a lazy day Sunday brunch.  One of those magical mornings.  The seven of us all together, home from church by 9am and no-one pushing to be anywhere but a friend’s barbecue in the afternoon.  That day.

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Truthfully, there is no definitive recipe for Kedgeree.  It’s generally accepted as being a fusion between khichdi and pilau brought back from India and given an anglicised spin.  The smoked fish and the hard boiled eggs being the British contribution.  I suppose that replaces the protein of khichdi’s lentils.  Some people add peas.  Others mushrooms.  You can make a looser, creamier version or something drier.  If you’re a follower of fashion you might want to top it with a softly poached egg and mix the smoked haddock with salmon et al.

It’s all fine, particularly since ‘Khichdi’ literally means hodgepodge and has just about as many variations.  Khichdi is often served with crispy fried onions on top and that’s why I put some on top of my Kedgeree.

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If you don’t have a stash of these sitting in your freezer they’re the first job.  What you don’t use with this will sit happily in the freezer.

Kedgeree Haddock

For the Kedgeree itself.  The first step is to poach the haddock.  For the seven of us, I used 2 fillets of undyed smoked haddock which weighed 0.735g.  A little bit more, a little bit less, isn’t going to matter.

Kedgeree Haddock in milk

My Mum always poached in milk and so do I.  Pour over some full-fat milk, enough so it almost covers the smoked haddock.

Bring to a gentle simmer, put the lid on and simmer for 4 minutes.

Kedgeree Pot

Take off the heat and leave to ‘steam’, lid on, for a further ten minutes.

Kedgeree onions

Chop a couple of onions.

Kedgeree 2

Bash 7 green cardamom pods.

Kedgeree 3

Crush about 20 fresh or freeze-dried curry leaves.  I can get fresh curry leaves at my weekly market.  I give them a wash and careful dry and store in my freezer.  My local Morrisons stocks Swartz freeze-dried curry leaves.  Break a long cinnamon stick.

Kedgeree soften onoins

Heat 5 tablespoons of ghee, or sunflower oil, in a sauté pan and add the curry leaves, cardamom, cinnamon and onions.

Kedgeree brown onions

Unlike most European recipes, get some colour on your onions.  You are looking for soft and golden rather than the more usual ‘translucent’.  Stir often and take it as dark as you dare.  It all adds flavour.

Haddock keep warm

By now your fish will be cooked.  Lift out and keep warm.  (Place them on a plate and cover with foil.  Rest the plate on a saucepan of simmering water.)  Sieve the milk and add enough water to make up to 900ml/1½ UK pints.

Kedgeree curry powder

Now the onions are golden, add the curry powder.

Kedgeree cook spices

Give everything a stir and cook for a couple of minutes.

Kedgeree coat rice in spices

Add the rinsed basmati rice and give everything a stir.

Kedgeree cook rice

Add the milk/water mix and bring to a boil.  Let it simmer, covered, for ten minutes.

Kedgeree cooked rice

It’ll look like this.

Kedgeree 17

Cream is an option, but I prefer butter.  Lay cubes of cold unsalted butter over the rice.

Kedgeree add fish

Place the cooked smoked haddock on top and cover with a lid.  Let it all sit and ‘steam’ for ten minutes or so.  While that’s happening, it’s time to boil the eggs.

Kedgeree lightly combine

By now the rice will be fully cooked.  Lightly fork the fish into the rice, leaving nice big fishy pieces.

Kedgeree Garnish

Stir through some chopped parsley and decorate with the hard boiled eggs.

Kedgeree plated

Top with some crispy fried onions.  Hot or cold.  Eat.

Kedgeree finishedKedgeree

Serves 6-7

  • 750g/ undyed smoked haddock
  • ¾ UK pint full-fat milk
  • 5 tablespoons of sunflower oil or ghee
  • 1 large cinnamon stick
  • 20 fresh or freeze dried curry leaves, crushed
  • 7 green cardamom pods, crushed
  • 2 onions, finely chopped
  • 1½ tablespoons of curry powder
  • 450g basmati rice, rinsed under running water until the water runs clear
  • 75g unsalted butter
  • 3 hard boiled eggs, to serve
  • Handful of fresh parsley, to serve
  • Handful of crispy fried onions, to serve (optional)

Place the smoked haddock in a single layer in a sauté pan and cover with the cold milk.  Bring to a boil, cover, and let it simmer for 4 minutes.  Remove from the heat and let it sit and finish cooking for a further 10 minutes.

Heat the sunflower oil (or ghee) in a shallow casserole dish.  Add the curry leaves, cardamom, cinnamon and onions.  Let the onions become soft and golden.

Remove the fish fillets from the milk and keep warm.  Strain the milk and add enough water to make 900ml/1½ UK pints.

Add the curry powder to the onions and cook over a gentle heat, stirring, for a couple of minutes.

Add the rinsed basmati rice and stir to coat.

Add the milk and water mix.  Bring to a boil and then lower the heat to a simmer and cover.  Cook for 10 minutes.  The rice should have absorbed the milk and be al dente.

Dot over the cubes of cold butter and lay the warm fish fillets on top.  Cover with a lid and let everything sit for a further 10 minutes.

Lightly fork the the fish into the rice and serve with chopped parsley, hard boiled eggs and crispy fried onions.

Eat.

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Breakfast Mushroom

I don’t think I’ve ever met a man who doesn’t love a ‘Full English’ and with Fathers’ Day looming you might be thinking of clogging up the arteries of the dad in your life.  Whilst it can be a wonderful thing to eat, it’s ‘proper’ cooking which feels bit gruelling when done horribly early in the morning, creates masses of washing up and isn’t child friendly.

So, now I’ve talked you out of it, here’s my solution.

Breakfast Mushroom 18

My ‘Breakfast Mushroom’ gives you most of the elements of a full English breakfast, but you can do all of the preparation the day before and get even young children helping.

Breakfast Mushroom 1

You need large flat mushrooms – the bigger the better.  Good quality streaky bacon – smoked or unsmoked.  Great breakfast sausages.  And, when cooking for my boys, black pudding.  They love it.

Black pudding has been made for centuries and is actually very good for you – protein, iron, potassium, calcium and magnesium.  By the time I got around to telling my boys it was a blood sausage they were already converts.  Liddy, however, doesn’t like it.  So, if it’s really not going to be your thing, crumbled blue cheese is also lovely.

Breakfast Mushroom 2

These are big saucer style mushrooms and benefit from being peeled.  Don’t wash them.  Simply brush off any dirt.

Breakfast Mushroom 3

Remove the stalk.  (Both the ‘peelings’ and the stalks can used for stock.)

Breakfast Mushroom 4

Black pudding freezes well.  Cut off what you’re going to use and remove the casing.  What’s left can be double wrapped and tucked away in the freezer for another day.

Breakfast Mushroom 5

Cut into cubes and encourage into crumbs.  Divide the black pudding between the mushrooms.

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There really isn’t a way of making the next part photogenic.  Remove the sausage-meat from the casings.  Roughly one sausage per mushroom.  Mix together with a fork.  It’s a much nicer texture if you don’t compact it down into a heavy lump.

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Form into patties and place on top of the black pudding (or cheese if that’s what you’ve decided).

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Ease the meat to the edges of the mushrooms.

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Now it’s the streaky bacon.  You could lay bacon very simply across the top, but making a lattice looks pretty.  Cut each strip in half.

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So, that’s three rashers of bacon, cut in half.

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Lay three on top of the sausage-meat.

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Lift up the central strip.

Breakfast Mushroom 10

Place another bacon strip across horizontally and replace the central strip into position.  Then fold back the two outside strips and lay the fifth bacon strip across horizontally, returning the folded back strips back into place.

Breakfast Mushroom 11

Finally, the central strip is folded back and the final piece of bacon placed horizontally.

Breakfast Mushroom 13

Tuck the ends underneath the mushroom and place on a baking sheet.

Breakfast Mushroom 14

And on to the next one …

Cover with cling film and pop into the fridge.  They’ll happily keep overnight.

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Even the earliest breakfast doesn’t feel much work now.  I like to have that first all-important cup of tea and, while that’s happening, I take my Breakfast Mushrooms out of the fridge and let everything return to room temperature.

Tomatoes can be cooked on the same tray.  Depending on their size you may have to remove them a little before the Breakfast Mushrooms.  Mine took 30 minutes in a hot oven (Aga Roasting Oven – 2nd set of runners).

Conventionally,  200ºC/Gas Mark 6/400ºF for 30 minutes.

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Coffee on!  I cook my eggs without oil on a piece of bake ‘o glide on the Simmering Plate.  (For a party trick, you can close the lid.  Always shocks everyone .. and you end up with a ‘sunny-side down’ effect.)

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Eat.

Breakfast Mushroom 18Breakfast Mushroom

Serves 1 – easily multiplied

  • 1 large flat mushroom
  • slice of black pudding
  • 1 breakfast sausage
  • 3 rashers of streaky bacon

Brush the mushroom free of any dirt, peel and de-stalk.  Crumble black pudding over the gills.

Remove the sausage-meat from its casing and break up with a fork.  Form into a loose patty and place on top of the black pudding.  Ease the meat across to the edge of the mushroom.

Cut each slice of streaky bacon in half and arrange all six strips in a lattice effect over the top of the sausage-meat.  Tuck the ends under and place on a baking sheet.

Cover with cling film and place in the fridge until needed.

To cook:  Allow everything to return to room temperature and pre-heat the oven to 200ºC/Gas Mark 6/400ºF.  Cook for 30 minutes.  Aga:  Roasting Oven on 2nd set of runners for 30 minutes.

Serve with fried egg and roasted tomatoes.  Eat.

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