Smoked Kielbasa


 

Cliff Bartlett

R.I.P. 5/17/2021
First of all I wanted to say I've been inspired to try this by all the great posts presented by Dwain Pannell regarding Charcuterie. After giving this a go, my hat is off to him and others who have demonstrated their skill in this area. I'd done beer sticks a few times but I wanted to move on to something new. I decided to try Kielbasa. First of all, it is one heck of a lot of work. Well worth it to me however. I split up the process over two days. Used the KA for the grinding and stuffing process. I learned as I went and will hopefully progress as I do more of this. I only had one blow out and this was not during the stuffing. It happened when I was trying to shape the meat in the already stuffed casing by squeezing it with my hands so it wasn't shaped like a sweet potato! Anyway, I got through it and here are my pic's.

Started with a 4 lb. boneless pork butt and 1 lb. of pork fat.



Cut it up into 1 inch chunks.



Seasoning. K Salt, Instacure #1, Coarse Black Pepper, Marjoram, Sugar and Chopped Fresh Garlic.



Seasoned the meat.



The grind.



Done and back in fridge for an hour or so.



All stuffed. No shots of this process. No way I was going to handle my camera while doing this!



Used snake for heat. Might change this next time to a modified Minion. I smoked for 4 -5 hours, gradually bringing grill temp from 130 for first hour, then jumped 20 degree increments every hour bringing it up to a final temp of 190. Had difficulty bringing up higher temps fast enough for my liking. Very windy day and that didn't help. Smoke wood was Apple.



Got on WSM after it stabilized at 130.



About half way.



Continued.....
 
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Just about there. Looking for an IT of 160.



These two took almost another hour to get up to temp.



Sliced up the little guy.





Well, that's it. We tasted some later in the day and it was delicious. Will let it chill in the fridge for a few days. We're going to have some fried with our eggs tomorrow. This was fun. Thanks for looking!
 
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Excellent job! Only one blow out. It's a bitter/sweat success story though: now you won't want store bought again. LOL

I've found the KA does an good grind job, but I want a dedicated stuffer. It's kind of a PITA to stuff with it as I'm sure you now know

Regardless -- those look top shelf!
 
Excellent job! Only one blow out. It's a bitter/sweat success story though: now you won't want store bought again. LOL

I've found the KA does an good grind job, but I want a dedicated stuffer. It's kind of a PITA to stuff with it as I'm sure you now know

Regardless -- those look top shelf!

Thanks Dwain, and everyone else! Yes, when I got done yesterday, I started thinking about an upgrade on my equipment. Might pick your brain down the road a bit for recommendations.
 
Beautiful. I picked up the grinder attachment for my KitchenAid specifically to make sausage but haven't tried it yet. I can only hope mine looks half as good as what you've made and what I've seen come out of Dwain's kitchen.
 
Great job Cliff, looks fantastic, got to try that. That's why I love this forum, the sharing of knowledge lets another member move up another notch.
 
Looks great. Everyone loves a good sausage. When I make sausage, I cheat and buy the pork already ground at Costco or our local grocery. I use a Weston Jerky Gun to stuff hog casings and use my Cajun Bandit convert as the smoker. Just finished a batch, but always looking for new recipes.
 
Great job Cliff - you really did well stuffing those. My first foray was not nearly so nice looking. In fact I am lazy so I just make bulk sausage most of the time...

Regards,

John
 
Cliff, outstanding job and I love sausage. Rich and I have made sausage a couple of times but not putting it into the castings, that's next on the list to try. Thanks for sharing.
 
Really nice job! I have this on my list to make and I have to say you made it look easy based on these pics.
 

 

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