Country Pork Sausage
Submitted by Arnie
Country pork sausage made from scratch with fresh pork shoulder, sweet red bell pepper, sage, salt, and black pepper. Grind, season, and shape into patties or stuff into links for breakfast that beats anything in a plastic tube.
YIELD
1 recipePREP
30 minCOOK
0 minREADY
4 hrsCountry pork sausage starts with one truth: when you grind your own pork shoulder, you control the fat ratio, the seasoning, and exactly how coarse the grind hits the pan. This homestead-style blend leans on dried sage, cracked black pepper, and a single sweet red bell pepper for a whisper of color and a faint vegetal sweetness against the rich pork.
The long total time isn’t active work. Most of it is the rest after grinding, which lets the salt penetrate and the seasonings bloom so each bite tastes seasoned all the way through, not just on the surface. Shape into breakfast patties, coil into a skillet for a Sunday biscuits-and-gravy base, or stuff into casings if you have the link attachment.
Pro Tips
- Keep everything cold. Chill the pork, the grinder parts, and even the seasonings before grinding so the fat stays in clean little flecks instead of smearing into a paste.
- Test your seasoning before committing the whole batch. Fry a small patty, taste, then adjust salt or sage.
- The 4-hour rest is where the magic happens. Don’t rush it. Cold rest in the fridge tightens the bind and deepens the flavor.
- Freeze patties between sheets of parchment so they pull apart cleanly straight from the freezer to a hot skillet.
Variations
- Swap dried sage for fresh chopped sage plus a pinch of thyme for a Tuscan lean.
- Add ½ teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes and a clove of grated garlic for a hot Italian style.
- Smoke the patties low over hickory for a country breakfast sausage with backbone.
Ingredients
Directions
Assemble food grinder with desired grinding disc.
Grind pork.
Combine pork and seasonings. Shape into patties or stuff in link sausage, using the sausage making accessory.
Let set.
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