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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I've been using ground pork in my lasagna but next time I'm going to try
pork sausage in hopes of a little more flavor. My question is breakfast sausage (Jimmy Dean) the same as the pork sausage that's sold in a tray at the meat department? And I don't mean Italian sausage (can't stand fennel.) The thought of using breakfast sausage just doesn't seen right. |
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In article >,
Scott > wrote: > I've been using ground pork in my lasagna but next time I'm going to try > pork sausage in hopes of a little more flavor. My question is breakfast > sausage (Jimmy Dean) the same as the pork sausage that's sold in a tray > at the meat department? And I don't mean Italian sausage (can't stand > fennel.) The thought of using breakfast sausage just doesn't seen right. It would probably work, but personally, I'd use Italian sausage. -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article >, > Scott > wrote: > >> I've been using ground pork in my lasagna but next time I'm going to try >> pork sausage in hopes of a little more flavor. My question is breakfast >> sausage (Jimmy Dean) the same as the pork sausage that's sold in a tray >> at the meat department? And I don't mean Italian sausage (can't stand >> fennel.) The thought of using breakfast sausage just doesn't seen right. > > It would probably work, but personally, I'd use Italian sausage. Is there such a thing as Italian sausage without the fennel flavor? Does Italian sausage = pork sausage + fennel? |
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"Scott" > ha scritto nel messaggio
... > Omelet wrote: > Is there such a thing as Italian sausage without the fennel flavor? Does > Italian sausage = pork sausage + fennel? Yes there is. No it doesn't. Some regions like it other don't. In Umbria there is no fennel seed but occasionally might be wild fennel pollen. |
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On Sep 15, 2:02*pm, "Giusi" > wrote:
> "Scott" > ha scritto nel messaggionews:XfOdnQA2Xuv7M1PVnZ2dnUVZ_j2dnZ2d@gig anews.com... > > > Omelet wrote: > > Is there such a thing as Italian sausage without the fennel flavor? Does > > Italian sausage = pork sausage + fennel? > > Yes there is. *No it doesn't. *Some regions like it other don't. *In Umbria > there is no fennel seed but occasionally might be wild fennel pollen. ====================================== Dear Scott. Make your own sausage and omit the fennel (seeds or fronds). I'm sure there's a recipe if you google. You don't need (or want) casings if it will be sauted (sorry no acute accent). Or just say to hell with it and mix ground pork with the seasonings you like best. Personally, I would doctor it up with salt, pepper, lots of crushed dried basil and a hint of oregano. Or . . . you could just listen to Giusi who knows absolutely everything there is to know about Italian food. Maybe even more than Lynne Rosetto Kasper. Lynn in Fargo, Loves fennel seeds but only in sausage pizza |
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On Sep 15, 2:05�pm, Scott > wrote:
> I've been using ground pork in my lasagna but next time I'm going to try > pork sausage in hopes of a little more flavor. My question is breakfast > sausage (Jimmy Dean) the same as the pork sausage that's sold in a tray > at the meat department? And I don't mean Italian sausage (can't stand > fennel.) The thought of using breakfast sausage just doesn't seen right. You might want to try a different brand of Italian sausage. Some don't have as much fennel as others. I'm not sure about your area but here we have a brand called Old Folks. I've tried it and I like it. You can taste the fennel but it's not overpowering. |
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On Sep 15, 9:43�pm, " > wrote:
> On Sep 15, 2:05 pm, Scott > wrote: > > > I've been using ground pork in my lasagna but next time I'm going to try > > pork sausage in hopes of a little more flavor. My question is breakfast > > sausage (Jimmy Dean) the same as the pork sausage that's sold in a tray > > at the meat department? And I don't mean Italian sausage (can't stand > > fennel.) The thought of using breakfast sausage just doesn't seen right.. > > You might want to try a different brand of Italian sausage. �Some > don't have as much fennel as others. �I'm not sure about your area but > here we have a brand called Old Folks. �I've tried it and I like it. > You can taste the fennel but it's not overpowering. If you absolutely hate Italian sausage you could try using a mixture of regular sausage and ground beef or regular sausage and ground pork. I put Italian sausage in my lasagna but I only use a small amount. The rest is ground chuck. |
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Lynn from Fargo > fnord
: > > Lynn in Fargo, > Loves fennel seeds but only in sausage pizza I put fennel in my pizza sauce... -- Saerah "Welcome to Usenet, Biatch! Adapt or haul ass!" - some hillbilly from FL |
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In article >,
Scott > wrote: > Omelet wrote: > > In article >, > > Scott > wrote: > > > >> I've been using ground pork in my lasagna but next time I'm going to try > >> pork sausage in hopes of a little more flavor. My question is breakfast > >> sausage (Jimmy Dean) the same as the pork sausage that's sold in a tray > >> at the meat department? And I don't mean Italian sausage (can't stand > >> fennel.) The thought of using breakfast sausage just doesn't seen right. > > > > It would probably work, but personally, I'd use Italian sausage. > > Is there such a thing as Italian sausage without the fennel flavor? Does > Italian sausage = pork sausage + fennel? Generally... unless you make your own. Making sausage is not exactly hard and it's a good thing as you can adjust it to taste. I make it with about 1/4 the salt usually called for to start. :-) If you don't like fennel, don't add it. -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article >, > Scott > wrote: > >> Omelet wrote: >>> In article >, >>> Scott > wrote: >>> >>>> I've been using ground pork in my lasagna but next time I'm going to try >>>> pork sausage in hopes of a little more flavor. My question is breakfast >>>> sausage (Jimmy Dean) the same as the pork sausage that's sold in a tray >>>> at the meat department? And I don't mean Italian sausage (can't stand >>>> fennel.) The thought of using breakfast sausage just doesn't seen right. >>> It would probably work, but personally, I'd use Italian sausage. >> Is there such a thing as Italian sausage without the fennel flavor? Does >> Italian sausage = pork sausage + fennel? > > Generally... unless you make your own. Making sausage is not exactly > hard and it's a good thing as you can adjust it to taste. I make it > with about 1/4 the salt usually called for to start. :-) > > If you don't like fennel, don't add it. If you were making sausage for lasagna what spices would you add? |
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In article >,
Scott > wrote: > Omelet wrote: > > In article >, > > Scott > wrote: > > > >> Omelet wrote: > >>> In article >, > >>> Scott > wrote: > >>> > >>>> I've been using ground pork in my lasagna but next time I'm going to try > >>>> pork sausage in hopes of a little more flavor. My question is breakfast > >>>> sausage (Jimmy Dean) the same as the pork sausage that's sold in a tray > >>>> at the meat department? And I don't mean Italian sausage (can't stand > >>>> fennel.) The thought of using breakfast sausage just doesn't seen right. > >>> It would probably work, but personally, I'd use Italian sausage. > >> Is there such a thing as Italian sausage without the fennel flavor? Does > >> Italian sausage = pork sausage + fennel? > > > > Generally... unless you make your own. Making sausage is not exactly > > hard and it's a good thing as you can adjust it to taste. I make it > > with about 1/4 the salt usually called for to start. :-) > > > > If you don't like fennel, don't add it. > > If you were making sausage for lasagna what spices would you add? Whatever personally worked for me, which would be Thyme, Basil and just a small amount of Oregano. And salt, pepper and garlic to taste. I DO like fennel, but in limited quantities. -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article >, > Scott > wrote: > >> Omelet wrote: >>> In article >, >>> Scott > wrote: >>> >>>> Omelet wrote: >>>>> In article >, >>>>> Scott > wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> I've been using ground pork in my lasagna but next time I'm going to try >>>>>> pork sausage in hopes of a little more flavor. My question is breakfast >>>>>> sausage (Jimmy Dean) the same as the pork sausage that's sold in a tray >>>>>> at the meat department? And I don't mean Italian sausage (can't stand >>>>>> fennel.) The thought of using breakfast sausage just doesn't seen right. >>>>> It would probably work, but personally, I'd use Italian sausage. >>>> Is there such a thing as Italian sausage without the fennel flavor? Does >>>> Italian sausage = pork sausage + fennel? >>> Generally... unless you make your own. Making sausage is not exactly >>> hard and it's a good thing as you can adjust it to taste. I make it >>> with about 1/4 the salt usually called for to start. :-) >>> >>> If you don't like fennel, don't add it. >> If you were making sausage for lasagna what spices would you add? > > Whatever personally worked for me, which would be Thyme, Basil and just > a small amount of Oregano. > > And salt, pepper and garlic to taste. > > I DO like fennel, but in limited quantities. Since I make my sauce with all the herbs you mention (-fennel) it seems to me I can just continue using plain ground pork since the herbs are already in the sauce. Am I over analyzing this? |
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In article >,
Scott > wrote: > >>> If you don't like fennel, don't add it. > >> If you were making sausage for lasagna what spices would you add? > > > > Whatever personally worked for me, which would be Thyme, Basil and just > > a small amount of Oregano. > > > > And salt, pepper and garlic to taste. > > > > I DO like fennel, but in limited quantities. > > Since I make my sauce with all the herbs you mention (-fennel) it seems > to me I can just continue using plain ground pork since the herbs are > already in the sauce. > Am I over analyzing this? Perhaps. ;-) Cooking to taste is very much an individual thing. But you know that. Spicing the meat separately tho' is not the same as flavoring the sauce. At least to me. -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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Omelet wrote:
> > Spicing the meat separately tho' is not the same as flavoring the sauce. > > At least to me. OK, this is my last post for this thread ![]() On what you said on spicing the meat separately, before I add the meat I saute onion and garlic in olive oil, then add oregano, basil, S&P, then add my meat. So I think I'm cover in that department. |
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I never tasted Italian sausage with fennel until I moved to Chicago from
Northeastern PA. The town north of where I grew up was all Italian and they only make the sausage with pork butts, garlic, salt and lots of black pepper. It was the only thing I knew for 15 years. "Lynn from Fargo" > wrote in message ... On Sep 15, 2:02 pm, "Giusi" > wrote: > "Scott" > ha scritto nel messaggionews:XfOdnQA2Xuv7M1PVnZ2dnUVZ_j2dnZ2d@gig anews.com... > > > Omelet wrote: > > Is there such a thing as Italian sausage without the fennel flavor? Does > > Italian sausage = pork sausage + fennel? > > Yes there is. No it doesn't. Some regions like it other don't. In Umbria > there is no fennel seed but occasionally might be wild fennel pollen. ====================================== Dear Scott. Make your own sausage and omit the fennel (seeds or fronds). I'm sure there's a recipe if you google. You don't need (or want) casings if it will be sauted (sorry no acute accent). Or just say to hell with it and mix ground pork with the seasonings you like best. Personally, I would doctor it up with salt, pepper, lots of crushed dried basil and a hint of oregano. Or . . . you could just listen to Giusi who knows absolutely everything there is to know about Italian food. Maybe even more than Lynne Rosetto Kasper. Lynn in Fargo, Loves fennel seeds but only in sausage pizza |
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On Sep 15, 3:02�pm, "Giusi" > wrote:
> "Scott" > ha scritto nel messaggionews:XfOdnQA2Xuv7M1PVnZ2dnUVZ_j2dnZ2d@gig anews.com... > > > Omelet wrote: > > Is there such a thing as Italian sausage without the fennel flavor? Does > > Italian sausage = pork sausage + fennel? > > Yes there is. �No it doesn't. �Some regions like it other don't. �In Umbria > there is no fennel seed but occasionally might be wild fennel pollen. I picture you using pork sausasge to impregnate yourself with wild fennel pollen! Name the first one Herberto! LOL |
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Steve Pope wrote:
> > wrote: > >> If you absolutely hate Italian sausage you could try using a mixture >> of regular sausage and ground beef or regular sausage and ground >> pork. > > Please define "regular sausage". > > Italian sausage is dead easy to make from ground pork, so > making a batch without fennel would seem the simplest approach > for fennel-haters. Nearly any pre-made Italian sausage or > breakfast sausage has lots of fennel in it. Alternate seasonings > might include paprika, sage, cayenne... > > > Steve I've never tasted fennel in any breakfast sausage |
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(Steve Pope) wrote:
> djs0 wrote: > > > If you absolutely hate Italian sausage you could > > try using a mixture of regular sausage and ground > > beef or regular sausage and ground pork. � > > Please define "regular sausage". There is no such thing as "regular" sausage... sausage by default is always seasoned... without seasoning it's just ground meat. > Italian sausage is dead easy to make from ground pork, so > making a batch without fennel would seem the simplest > approach for fennel-haters. Nearly any pre-made Italian > sausage or breakfast sausage has lots of fennel in it. � I've never seen fennel in breakfast sausage. Breakfast sausage is seasoned as differently from guinea saw-seege as night is different from day... breakfast sausage contains salt, white pepper, sage (lots), ground ginger, nutmeg, and thyme, sometimes maple syrup. And 'talian sausage doesn't necessarily contain fennel, in fact those dago saw-seege that contain cheese, bell peppers, onion, parsley, wine, etc, do not usually contain fennel. Naturally the best sausage is that one makes themself... that is with meat they've ground themself (so they know what/who's in it). Making sausage with pre ground pork (mystery meat) and adding ones own spices is NOT making sausage, not anymore than using pre ground beef (mystery meat) to make burgers and adding ones own ketchup. Making any sausage (or any dish) with pre ground mystery meat is analogous to getting laid with a dildo... actually a dildo is better than mystery meat, at least you won't catch any diseases. |
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In article
>, Sheldon > wrote: > breakfast sausage contains salt, white pepper, sage > (lots), ground ginger, nutmeg, and thyme, Do you have specific amounts of those you add Shel'? Please? -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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Sheldon wrote:
> > I've never seen fennel in breakfast sausage. Breakfast sausage is > seasoned as differently from guinea saw-seege as night is different > from day... breakfast sausage contains salt, white pepper, sage > (lots), ground ginger, nutmeg, and thyme, sometimes maple syrup. So that answer one of my question then...breakfast sausage is not the same as regular sausage. And > 'talian sausage doesn't necessarily contain fennel, > Does anyone know of any brand of Italian sausage that doesn't contain fennel? |
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In article >,
Scott > wrote: > Does anyone know of any brand of Italian sausage that doesn't contain > fennel? Home made. ;-) Any _commercial_ brand of Italian sausage (at least in my arear, YMMV as always) has contained fennel. Honestly babe, its not that hard to make your own sausage! Buy ground pork (or grind your own), add the appropriate spices and voila! There are recipes all over the web. Here is mine. Excerpt from a posting where I made stuff Italian sausage. Just skip the fennel: To each lb. of meat was added: 1/2 tsp. salt free lemon pepper (it called for black pepper but I was too tired to grind that much but the result was excellent so I'll probably just use this from now on! All I have on hand are fresh peppercorns in a grinder) 1/4 tsp. garlic powder or granulated garlic 1/4 tbs. sea salt 1/4 tsp. dried basil 1 tbs. mixed Italian herbs, McCormick brand to include: Marjoram, Thyme, Rosemary, Savory, Sage, Oregano and Basil. I don't normally use spice mixes for stuff like this, but it smelled "right" if you know what I mean. I did add extra Basil and Sage at 1/4 tbs. dried Basil and 1/4 tsp. sage per lb. of meat. Final flavorings per lb. were 1/2 tsp. paprika and 1 tsp. whole fennel seed per lb. I made 24 lbs. at roughly 8 oz. per link. -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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Scott > wrote:
> Sheldon wrote: > > > I've never seen fennel in breakfast sausage. �Breakfast sausage is > > seasoned as differently from guinea saw-seege as night is different > > from day... breakfast sausage contains salt, white pepper, sage > > (lots), ground ginger, nutmeg, and thyme, sometimes maple syrup. > > So that answer one of my question then...breakfast sausage is not the > same as regular sausage. No it does not... there is no such thing as "regular" sausage... are you playing at being obnoxious or are you naturally a moron. |
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Omelet wrote:
> �Scott > wrote: > > Does anyone know of any brand of Italian sausage that doesn't contain > > fennel? > > Home made. ;-) > > Any _commercial_ brand of Italian sausage (at least in �my arear, YMMV > as always) has contained fennel. > > Honestly babe, its not that hard to make your own sausage! > > Buy ground pork (or grind your own), add the appropriate spices and > voila! > > There are recipes all over the web. > > Here is mine. Excerpt from a posting where I made stuff Italian sausage. > Just skip the fennel: > > To each lb. of meat was added: > > 1/2 tsp. salt free lemon pepper (it called for black pepper but I was > too tired to grind that much but the result was excellent so I'll > probably just use this from now on! All I have on hand are fresh > peppercorns in a grinder) Huh... whaddaya jerking us off... 1/2 tsp is like six friggin' grinds... do you really get carpel tunnel from masturbating, I heard that was the cure! hehe |
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In article
>, Sheldon > wrote: > Omelet wrote: > > ?Scott > wrote: > > > Does anyone know of any brand of Italian sausage that doesn't contain > > > fennel? > > > > Home made. ;-) > > > > Any commercial brand of Italian sausage (at least in ?my arear, YMMV > > as always) has contained fennel. > > > > Honestly babe, its not that hard to make your own sausage! > > > > Buy ground pork (or grind your own), add the appropriate spices and > > voila! > > > > There are recipes all over the web. > > > > Here is mine. Excerpt from a posting where I made stuff Italian sausage. > > Just skip the fennel: > > > > To each lb. of meat was added: > > > > 1/2 tsp. salt free lemon pepper (it called for black pepper but I was > > too tired to grind that much but the result was excellent so I'll > > probably just use this from now on! All I have on hand are fresh > > peppercorns in a grinder) > > Huh... whaddaya jerking us off... 1/2 tsp is like six friggin' > grinds... do you really get carpel tunnel from masturbating, I heard > that was the cure! hehe I really was very tired that day... I'd already been awake for 22 hours when I got around to setting up for it. It's a quote from an old post. AND I was making 24 lbs! -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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Sheldon > wrote:
>(Steve Pope) wrote: >> Please define "regular sausage". >There is no such thing as "regular" sausage... sausage by default is >always seasoned... without seasoning it's just ground meat. Yep >> Italian sausage is dead easy to make from ground pork, so >> making a batch without fennel would seem the simplest >> approach for fennel-haters. Nearly any pre-made Italian > sausage or >> breakfast sausage has lots of fennel in it. � >I've never seen fennel in breakfast sausage. Breakfast sausage is >seasoned as differently from guinea saw-seege as night is different >from day... breakfast sausage contains salt, white pepper, sage >(lots), ground ginger, nutmeg, and thyme, sometimes maple syrup. Thanks. I've probably been buying yuppie, chicken-apple breakfast sausage that has fennel in it and have forgotten what the mass-market stuff tastes like. > And 'talian sausage doesn't necessarily contain fennel, in > fact those dago saw-seege that contain cheese, bell peppers, > onion, parsley, wine, etc, do not usually contain fennel. > Naturally the best sausage is that one makes themself... that > is with meat they've ground themself (so they know what/who's > in it). Making sausage with pre ground pork (mystery meat) > and adding ones own spices is NOT making sausage, not anymore > than using pre ground beef (mystery meat) to make burgers and > adding ones own ketchup. Thanks for the tip. What if you watch the butcher put the meat in the meat grinder, does that count as real? Steve |
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Sheldon wrote:
> > No it does not... there is no such thing as "regular" sausage... are > you playing at being obnoxious or are you naturally a moron. > Where I shop at in the ground beef section (you grind your own meat so you're not familiar with that section, so I'll let you slide on that one) they have in styrofoam trays, ground pork and pork sausage. So what kind of sausage then is the 'pork sausage'? |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article >, > Scott > wrote: > >> Does anyone know of any brand of Italian sausage that doesn't contain >> fennel? > > Home made. ;-) > > Any _commercial_ brand of Italian sausage (at least in my arear, YMMV > as always) has contained fennel. > > Honestly babe, its not that hard to make your own sausage! > > Buy ground pork (or grind your own), add the appropriate spices and > voila! > > There are recipes all over the web. > > Here is mine. Excerpt from a posting where I made stuff Italian sausage. > Just skip the fennel: > > To each lb. of meat was added: > > 1/2 tsp. salt free lemon pepper (it called for black pepper but I was > too tired to grind that much but the result was excellent so I'll > probably just use this from now on! All I have on hand are fresh > peppercorns in a grinder) > > 1/4 tsp. garlic powder or granulated garlic > > 1/4 tbs. sea salt > > 1/4 tsp. dried basil > > 1 tbs. mixed Italian herbs, McCormick brand to include: > Marjoram, Thyme, Rosemary, Savory, Sage, Oregano and Basil. > > I don't normally use spice mixes for stuff like this, but it smelled > "right" if you know what I mean. I did add extra Basil and Sage at 1/4 > tbs. dried Basil and 1/4 tsp. sage per lb. of meat. > > Final flavorings per lb. were 1/2 tsp. paprika and 1 tsp. whole fennel > seed per lb. I made 24 lbs. at roughly 8 oz. per link. Saved and Printed! Thanks Om |
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In article >,
Scott > wrote: > Sheldon wrote: > > > > > No it does not... there is no such thing as "regular" sausage... are > > you playing at being obnoxious or are you naturally a moron. > > > > Where I shop at in the ground beef section (you grind your own meat so > you're not familiar with that section, so I'll let you slide on that > one) they have in styrofoam trays, ground pork and pork sausage. So what > kind of sausage then is the 'pork sausage'? Most likely breakfast sausage. It's the most common. -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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In article >,
Scott > wrote: > Saved and Printed! > > Thanks Om Cheers. :-) That recipe really worked. At least for me and my family... -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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(Steve Pope) wrote:
> > What if you watch the butcher put the meat in the > meat grinder, does that count as real? No! Those huge commercial grinders can hold two pounds and more in their body... the meat you choose pushes out what was already in there. If you choose some good cut then after you leave the butcher will use some lesser meat to push yours out and he will keep yours for himself. The ONLY way to know is to grind your own. |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article >, > Scott > wrote: > >> Sheldon wrote: >> >>> No it does not... there is no such thing as "regular" sausage... are >>> you playing at being obnoxious or are you naturally a moron. >>> >> Where I shop at in the ground beef section (you grind your own meat so >> you're not familiar with that section, so I'll let you slide on that >> one) they have in styrofoam trays, ground pork and pork sausage. So what >> kind of sausage then is the 'pork sausage'? > > Most likely breakfast sausage. It's the most common. So let me confirm this then. Basically there are 2 kinds of sausage available at most supermarkets: breakfast and Italian. So if want to use sausage (without fennel) in my lasagna I will have to make my own (using your recipe as a starting point) |
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In article >,
Scott > wrote: > Omelet wrote: > > In article >, > > Scott > wrote: > > > >> Sheldon wrote: > >> > >>> No it does not... there is no such thing as "regular" sausage... are > >>> you playing at being obnoxious or are you naturally a moron. > >>> > >> Where I shop at in the ground beef section (you grind your own meat so > >> you're not familiar with that section, so I'll let you slide on that > >> one) they have in styrofoam trays, ground pork and pork sausage. So what > >> kind of sausage then is the 'pork sausage'? > > > > Most likely breakfast sausage. It's the most common. > > So let me confirm this then. Basically there are 2 kinds of sausage > available at most supermarkets: breakfast and Italian. So if want to use > sausage (without fennel) in my lasagna I will have to make my own (using > your recipe as a starting point) Uh, no, there are breakfast and "other". In my supermarket alone, the most common is Breakfast sausage, but there is also Italian, Keilbasa, Polish, Bratwurst, Knockwurst, Beer Brat's... You get the idea. :-) And variations of each! I live in the south so some sausages come in "mild" and "hot". -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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On Sep 17, 1:49�pm, Scott > wrote:
> Sheldon wrote: > > > No it does not... there is no such thing as "regular" sausage... are > > you playing at being obnoxious or are you naturally a moron. > > Where I shop at in the ground beef section (you grind your own meat so > you're not familiar with that section, so I'll let you slide on that > one) I can assure you I'm more familiar with that meat section than you, that's why I would never buy that mystery meat. >they have in styrofoam trays, ground pork and pork > sausage. So what kind of sausage then is the 'pork > sausage'? You just said they have styrofoam trays of ground pork (that's not sausage, it's just plain old ground pork, no way to tell which cut, what's in it, who's in it) and of pork sausage (if not in casings that's bulk sausage), most likely italian, but by law it would need to specify which type of sausage (could be breakfast sausage) and list all the ingredients. If you don't like fennel seed but insist on buying pre made mystery meat italian sausage from a stupidmarket then you have but one choice, learn to like fennel seed. Otherwise find a real butcher shop that will custom make your sausage, or make your own. |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article >, > Scott > wrote: > >> Omelet wrote: >>> In article >, >>> Scott > wrote: >>> >>>> Sheldon wrote: >>>> >>>>> No it does not... there is no such thing as "regular" sausage... are >>>>> you playing at being obnoxious or are you naturally a moron. >>>>> >>>> Where I shop at in the ground beef section (you grind your own meat so >>>> you're not familiar with that section, so I'll let you slide on that >>>> one) they have in styrofoam trays, ground pork and pork sausage. So what >>>> kind of sausage then is the 'pork sausage'? >>> Most likely breakfast sausage. It's the most common. >> So let me confirm this then. Basically there are 2 kinds of sausage >> available at most supermarkets: breakfast and Italian. So if want to use >> sausage (without fennel) in my lasagna I will have to make my own (using >> your recipe as a starting point) > > Uh, no, there are breakfast and "other". > > In my supermarket alone, the most common is Breakfast sausage, but there > is also Italian, Keilbasa, Polish, Bratwurst, Knockwurst, Beer Brat's... > > You get the idea. :-) > > And variations of each! I live in the south so some sausages come in > "mild" and "hot". I meant to say ground sausage...sorry. |
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In article >,
Scott > wrote: > Omelet wrote: > > In article >, > > Scott > wrote: > > > >> Omelet wrote: > >>> In article >, > >>> Scott > wrote: > >>> > >>>> Sheldon wrote: > >>>> > >>>>> No it does not... there is no such thing as "regular" sausage... are > >>>>> you playing at being obnoxious or are you naturally a moron. > >>>>> > >>>> Where I shop at in the ground beef section (you grind your own meat so > >>>> you're not familiar with that section, so I'll let you slide on that > >>>> one) they have in styrofoam trays, ground pork and pork sausage. So what > >>>> kind of sausage then is the 'pork sausage'? > >>> Most likely breakfast sausage. It's the most common. > >> So let me confirm this then. Basically there are 2 kinds of sausage > >> available at most supermarkets: breakfast and Italian. So if want to use > >> sausage (without fennel) in my lasagna I will have to make my own (using > >> your recipe as a starting point) > > > > Uh, no, there are breakfast and "other". > > > > In my supermarket alone, the most common is Breakfast sausage, but there > > is also Italian, Keilbasa, Polish, Bratwurst, Knockwurst, Beer Brat's... > > > > You get the idea. :-) > > > > And variations of each! I live in the south so some sausages come in > > "mild" and "hot". > > I meant to say ground sausage...sorry. Ground MEAT babe. ;-D I'm glad you liked the recipe... It was a copy/paste from my files. -- Peace! Om "If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." --Mark Twain |
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Sheldon wrote:
> On Sep 17, 1:49�pm, Scott > wrote: >> Sheldon wrote: >> >>> No it does not... there is no such thing as "regular" sausage... are >>> you playing at being obnoxious or are you naturally a moron. >> Where I shop at in the ground beef section (you grind your own meat so >> you're not familiar with that section, so I'll let you slide on that >> one) > > I can assure you I'm more familiar with that meat section than you, > that's why I would never buy that mystery meat. > Alright, you got me on that one. >> they have in styrofoam trays, ground pork and pork >> sausage. So what kind of sausage then is the 'pork >> sausage'? > > You just said they have styrofoam trays of ground pork (that's not > sausage, it's just plain old ground pork, no way to tell which cut, > what's in it, who's in it) and of pork sausage (if not in casings > that's bulk sausage), most likely italian, but by law it would need to > specify which type of sausage (could be breakfast sausage) and list > all the ingredients. > The label just has 'Pork Sausage' so I guess they're breaking the law by not specifying which type of sausage but they do list the ingredients but fennel is not listed, so probably breakfast sausage. > If you don't like fennel seed but insist on buying pre made mystery > meat italian sausage from a stupidmarket then you have but one choice, > learn to like fennel seed. Not going to happen. Otherwise find a real butcher shop that > will custom make your sausage, or make your own. I'll make my own thanks to Om. |
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Scott > wrote:
>I'll make my own thanks to Om. Certainly. Only about 16 people in this thread suggested you make your own sausage, but you're giving all the credit to Om. Steve |
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Steve Pope wrote:
> Scott > wrote: > >> I'll make my own thanks to Om. > > Certainly. Only about 16 people in this thread suggested > you make your own sausage, but you're giving all the credit to Om. > > Steve But she posted a recipe from her private collection. |
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![]() Scott wrote: > Steve Pope wrote: > > Scott > wrote: > > > >> I'll make my own thanks to Om. > > > > Certainly. Only about 16 people in this thread suggested > > you make your own sausage, but you're giving all the credit to Om. > > > > Steve > > But she posted a recipe from her private collection. Jeez, sounds like pork[n]ography to me... -- Best Greg " I find Greg Morrow lowbrow, witless, and obnoxious. For him to claim that we are some kind of comedy team turns my stomach." - "cybercat" to me on rec.food.cooking |
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