@ten*teeny*tiny*toes wrote:

You confuse the heck out of me, Nevynreally.

 

Prick or not?


Impatient people prick. Patient people don't.

 

Clear as mud.

 

Interestingly, someone else said same last week. Different nic.

The surface tension differs due to varying thickness of the skin and temperature difference of the cooking surface, as well as the density of the material behind the skin.

Hence the reaction will differ along the sausage surface and cause it to bend.

 

Should the perfect sausage be made and cooked on an even cooking surface, it probably won't bend.

 

As for pricking sausages, it lets out a lot of the juices and can make them dry but if you are watching your cholesterol intake it can be a good thing.

image host


@nevynreally wrote:

@am*3 wrote:

No, sausages should not be pricked with anything, lets all the fat and juices run out and left with all the dry stuff.

 

I don't like sausages - essence of meat...


Stops them curling,   So, no one knows how to cook a snag?

 

Not really surprised.


Not it doesn't it just lets all the fat and juice out as mentioned above, so you end up with a drier than should be sausage.


@kopenhagen5 wrote:

The surface tension differs due to varying thickness of the skin and temperature difference of the cooking surface, as well as the density of the material behind the skin.

Hence the reaction will differ along the sausage surface and cause it to bend.

 

Should the perfect sausage be made and cooked on an even cooking surface, it probably won't bend.

 

As for pricking sausages, it lets out a lot of the juices and can make them dry but if you are watching your cholesterol intake it can be a good thing.


If anyone is watching their cholesterol intake then they shouldn't eat sausages at all whether they are pricked or not.Woman Very Happy

 

Whats left without the fat/juices anyway... sausage 'powder'?

 

 


@j*oono wrote:

Gave up the prick years ago Woman Tongue


 

Ah that accounts for your demeaner, you should take it up again 🙂

I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.

You haven't tasted sausages until you've tried these. I'm drooling as I'm typing this.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumberland_sausage

 

 

Looks like my dog has been there ...... whoops .. sorry!

 

If I cook sausages, I usually curry them or make them in brown onion gravy and I boil them first and slice them.  Skins fall off, not dry at all and no fat.

 photo 214a93fa3a9e326200857a2dbc30e730_zps379416e4.jpg

Stolen I reckon from a South African braai...looks just like Boerewors.

 

Sorry Sandy, but sausages have come a long way and will run from being casseroled.

That looks like a Medisterpolse.

Traditional Scandinavian sausage and many things in early days were similar in the British Isles. Smiley Happy

 

 

image host