Chapter 4 Sausage Casings Topics Covered • • • • • • Natural casings Synthetic or cellulose casing Collagen casing Stuffing the casing Smoking the sausage Poaching the sausage.

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Transcript Chapter 4 Sausage Casings Topics Covered • • • • • • Natural casings Synthetic or cellulose casing Collagen casing Stuffing the casing Smoking the sausage Poaching the sausage.

Chapter 4
Sausage Casings
Topics Covered
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Natural casings
Synthetic or cellulose casing
Collagen casing
Stuffing the casing
Smoking the sausage
Poaching the sausage
Natural Casings
• Processed intestines of hogs, sheep, and
cattle
– Hog stomach: tongue sausage
– Sheep stomach: haggis (Scottish specialty)
– Beef: middles and rounds
• For bologna, mortadella, liverwurst, salami, etc.
– Beef bung: veal sausage, large bologna and
cooked salami
Natural Casings (cont’d.)
• After harvested, intestines are:
– Cleaned
– Calibrated
– Stretched and sized
– Packed in plain salt or a salt brine solution
• Measurements
– Large intestine casings in inches
– Smaller intestine casings in millimeters
• Called hank or bundle
Natural Casings (cont’d.)
• Before use:
– Wash in lukewarm water
– Force water through to
flush out impurities
– Rinse outside to remove all
salt
– Soak for one hour in warm
water to soften and make
tender
One hank of sausage casings
Natural Casings (cont’d.)
Beef casings
Natural Casings (cont’d.)
Lamb casings
Natural Casings (cont’d.)
Hog casings
Synthetic or Cellulose Casings
• Synthetic fibrous casings:
– The norm
– Array of colors
– Purchased on Internet or mail-order
– Usually lined on inside with a coat of protein
• Allows synthetic casing to shrink with filling
– Less expensive
– Easier to store
– Synthetic/cellulose casings are not edible
Collagen Casings
• Similar to animal casings but have
manufactured uniformity
– Allow consistency
– Hide of cattle consists of collagen
– Corium layer is extruded from area between
grain (hair) layer and fat and muscle layer
– Protein and water are mixed with lactic acid
and cellulose fibers, causing swelling and
slurry to form
Collagen Casings (cont’d.)
• Acid-swollen slurry is de-aerated under
vacuum
– Homogenized and filtered
– De-aerated again; stored to chill in tanks
– Extruded through die with counterrotating
sleeves: “weaves” fibers together
– Passes through concentrate coagulating
solution of inorganic salt
Collagen Casings (cont’d.)
• Chemically treated in processing machine
– Cross-link
• Washed, plasticized with glycerin, dried,
and partially rehumidified and wound on
reels
– Reels are taken to a shirring machine
– Collagen casing is shirred to regenerate
cellulose
Collagen Casings (cont’d.)
• Two types of edible collagen casings:
– Thin skin for fresh sausages
– Thicker skin for smoked sausages
• Nonedible flat collagen casings:
– Can be stored at room temperature
– Must be soaked in salted lukewarm water for
30 minutes before use
Stuffing the Casing
• Set up hand or electric sausage
– Make sure nozzle and work table/sheet pan
are lubricated with cold water
• Prevents sticking and tearing
– All parts of stuffer that contacts forcemeat
must be sanitized, clean, and well chilled
– Fill stuffer with forcemeat by pressing or
tapping down
• Removes all possible air pockets
Stuffing the Casing (cont’d.)
• Slide open end of casing
over nozzle
– Pipe into casing
– Support casing with full hand
as forcemeat is piped into
nozzle casing
• After sausages are
measured into shape,
pierce to remove air pockets
Filling hog casing for
boudin and ready
cooked boudin
Stuffing the Casing (cont’d.)
Making a bubble knot for large casings
Smoking the Sausage
• Cold smoke:
– Hang sausages made without curing salts to
dry for 1 to 2 hours in a 70°F room
• Hot smoke:
– Hang cured sausages to incubate in a 70°F
room for 12 to 24 hours
– Smoke following time and temperature
directions
– Sausages are now ready to be poached
Poaching the Sausage
• Use a large or oversized pot
• Use hand or digital thermometer to
monitor temperature of poaching water
– If water temperature is too high, sausages will
burst
• If too low, the sausages may lose flavor
– Starting temperature: 160°F–170°F
– Finishing internal temperature: 155°F to
160°F
Poaching the Sausage (cont’d.)
• Cooling process for natural casings is
started in cold running water
• For synthetic casings, start cooling in
lukewarm water
– Slowly finish in cold running water
• All sausages must be refrigerated or
frozen before use
Summary
• This chapter reviewed:
– Differences among various casings (natural,
synthetic, and collagen)
– How to work with casings
– How to prepare casings for filling
– How to tie casings
– How to poach and cool sausages