Hi All,
I have been making sausages for a while now (a year or more) with the following outline recipe:
Leanish pork meat: 57.5%
Pork back fat: 23.2%
Homemade rusk (flour, water + baking soda) : 6.2%
Water: 11.1%
Spices: 2.0%
I found this formula to produce a good quality sausage that is not too dry and cooks well - not much skin splitting etc. However, production runs now mean that making the rusk at home is too time consuming. We have therefore contracted a local bakery to making the rusk for us. The rusk they produce is much drier than the version we make at home. This allows the rusk to have a shelflife of months since no mould grows on it.
The extra dryness means that it absorbs more water so we put less less rusk in and have increased the water as follows:
Leanish pork meat: 57.5%
Pork back fat: 23.2%
New extra-dry rusk (flour, water + baking soda) : 3.5%
Water: 13.8%
Spices: 2.0%
The resulting sausage again cooks well and has a good texture. However, I noticed that the sausages made to the new recipe may be shrinking more than their older cousins.
Questions: Am I correct in assuming that the extra water would cause them to shrink more when they are being cooked?
If I went back to the same amount of water as before (11%) and increased the fat content slightly to 26% would you think this would cure the problem?