Thought I would post my comments on the board regarding my first attempts at making sausages.
First off I'm not in any business, have any training or have any background in terms of the rearing or the preparation of food. Decided after leaving university 8 years ago (and actually having money that went beyond beans and toast) to get a bit more interested in food.
Desire came from an increasing deisre to enjoy food more - my mum was / is an excellent cook which I only appreciated after about the age of 21 and a general feeling that the food chain via the supermarket route was just too unpalatable.
Anyway about 1 year ago I bought a mincer which I thought would help making sausages, pate etc. However the experience for me was pretty awful. Combination of my inexperience and a limited machine resulted in hours of angst - unblocking the grinder plate, the meat heating up and going a horrible texture - a total nightmare.
Being a lazy and untalented chap I bought a Kenwood Chef about 6 months ago and frankly it was the best thing I've ever bought. While saving me a bucket load of time the net effect means I spend much more time in the kitchen attempting loads more things,
The Kenwood has a pretty nifty mincer / sausage maker which on the first attempt enabled me to go from having a kilogram of pork belly / shoulder to sausages in about 20 minutes.
I asked the butcher for the skins (sorry Franco I'm not keen about giving bank stuff over the net and am awaiting new cheque book to fulfill order for rusk and skins!) and he was pretty helpful.
The only moment of horror was actually getting the skin out - I thought the smell was a bit awful but Parsons has posted elsewhere on how this could be avoided - the butcher (who was making his sausages in the back shop when I was in) supplied about 2 metres in a kind of brine like liquid. To those who have a limited experience in handling food this fro me was the tricky bit. He suggested running some water at one end of the skin, then when it becomes apparent where the hole is, gently fit the skin over the nozzle where the sausage meat comes out.
For filling I followed Parsons excellent tip - get a bod to put the meat in as you support the sausage coming out. I was keen not to overfill and sometimes I gave gentle encouragement to the skin if there was a sudden increase in the amount coming out the nozzle.
There are so many great recipes on this board but for my first attempt I used one in the Kenwood book. They tasted superb!
Pork Fennel and Paprika sausages
I took the weights and multiplied by 2.2 to get a Kilo
450g Lean pork shoulder / Pork belly
1/2 tsp black / white peppercorns coarsely crushed
1/2 tsp Fennel seeds
2 tsp salt
1 tbsp Paprika
1 egg
25g Breadcrumbs
Hints and tips
Scour the content on this board and don't be afraid to ask the most elementary of questions
Find yourself a good butcher if you haven't got one already
Personally (while recognising it may take the feeling of being a true artisan in the sausage making arena) if you're a novice I would consider getting a Chef / Kitchenaid type machine
Get a running machine to run off the calories of eating some fantastic food