Homemade Hot Dogs

Restaurant Favorites Throughout Thailand
-And favorite recipes and recipe requests-
Post Reply
lvdkeyes
Posts: 3820
Joined: Sat Jul 31, 2010 6:40 pm
Location: Pattaya
Been thanked: 38 times
Contact:

Homemade Hot Dogs

Post by lvdkeyes »

Here is the recipe that was requested. I have not made them yet, myself.

• Homemade Hot Dogs

• 3 feet sheep or small (1-1/2-inch diameter) hog casings (Available at Makro, frozen)
• 2 pounds very fatty beef, cubed
• 1/4 cup very finely minced onion
• 1 small clove garlic, finely chopped
• 1 teaspoon finely ground coriander
• 1/4 teaspoon dried marjoram
• 1/4 teaspoon ground mace
• 1/2 teaspoon ground mustard seed
• 1 teaspoon sweet paprika
• 1 teaspoon freshly fine ground white pepper
• 1 egg white
• 1-1/2 teaspoons sugar
• 1 teaspoon salt, or to taste
• 1/4 cup milk

Prepare the casings (see instructions below).
In a blender or food processor, make a puree of the onion, garlic, coriander, marjoram, mace, mustard seed, andpaprika. Add the pepper, egg white, sugar, salt, and milk and mix thoroughly.

Grind the beef through the fine blade. Mix the seasonings into the meat mixture with your hands. This tends to be a sticky procedure, so wet your hands with cold water first.

Chill the mixture for half an hour then put the mixture thorough the fine blade of the grinder once more. Stuff the casings and twist them off into six-inch links. Parboil the links (without separating them) in gently simmering water for 20 minutes. Place the franks in a bowl of ice water and chill thoroughly. Remove, pat dry, and refrigerate. Because they are precooked, they can be refrigerated for up to a week or they can be frozen.

Preparing the Casing

Snip off about four feet of casing. (Better too much than too little because any extra can be repacked in salt and used later.) Rinse the casing under cool running water to remove any salt clinging to it. Place it in a bowl of cool water and let it soak for about half an hour. While you're waiting for the casing to soak, you can begin preparing the meat as detailed above.

After soaking, rinse the casing under cool running water. Slip one end of the casing over the faucet nozzle.

Place the casing in a bowl of water and add a splash of white vinegar. A tablespoon of vinegar per cup of water is sufficient. The vinegar softens the casing a bit more and makes it more transparent, which in turn makes your sausage more pleasing to the eye. Leave the casing in the water/vinegar solution until you are ready to use it. Rinse it well and drain before stuffing.
Post Reply