Bandana boy wrote: » 80% pork is far to high for a good sausage A few years back a large deli provider was doing taste tests on new sausages for their standard breakfast roll sausage and I got to see the results (and taste some of the contenders) One of the big wigs wanted to advertise they had the highest pork content sausage so they started with really high pork content range and their original 50% pork product was in the tests as a control and the 50% was killing all those high pork content sausages. They then re did their spec and had a second session and settled on a 60% version , I was initially surprised but I agreed the 50-60% is the sweet spot and subsequently found most butcher shop sausages would be in this category.
beachhead wrote: » What is all the fuss about these sausages.It is excellent hype going back to Fergal's days.A bit like Tayto and Cadbury's choclate(from Coolock not UK as now-choclate,that is).They did have a certain flavour but nothing to cross the planet for.Were crap b4 Musgrave's bought SQ
pauldavis123 wrote: » Donnybrook Fair have the best sausages, they have the old O'Gormans recipe and they get Granby butchers to make them to that spec. You have to get them from behind the butcher counter, the prepacked ones are different. The Granby shop in Parnell square will not sell them and their own sausages are just not as nice. Sausages have to be eaten within 48 hours of being ground or they will lose the natural sweetness of the pork IMO.
Eric Cartman wrote: » Im sure an unpopular opinion but absolutely agree, denny gold medal are 60% and the fats and other bits in there really make them a delicious all round sausage. I find a lot of the ‘artisan’ or ‘luxury’ sausages are not as nice , theyre a comfort food , theyre supposed to be a bit trashy with a bit of fat
Goose81 wrote: » Are Denny gold medal 60%? That's nuts, I thought they would be about 30% , I wouldn't give them to the dog tbh.
Ger Roe wrote: » The best saussies I ever had were Boswells Sausages. It was a long time ago, back in the 80's If I remember correctly and I think they were made in Blackrock, Co Dublin. They were gourmet class, before we know what that was, with weird and wonderful varieties like guinness and coarse mustard infused. They were hard to get, not widely distributed, but I never tasted anything like them - they had an actual texture of eating real meat and not just pink sponge. I sometimes wonder if I dreamed them up, because no one else I know remembers them. I think I used to get them in a butcher shop on Moore Street. An honourable mention to Cipriani butchers on the main street in Bray, now also lost in the mists of time, but they did a great banger in their day.
bobbysands81 wrote: » Is it wrong that I still love Superquinn sausages???!!!
Dizzyblonde wrote: » I have to confess that I've come to prefer Denny's or the Aldi ones recently. Unless I'm making a sausage casserole, then I use the Cumberland sausages from Supervalu because they have more substance.
Dial Hard wrote: » I've literally never had a gristly sausage in my life.
the beer revolu wrote: » I think it's a really interesting theory that an increase in meat content led to a drop in popularity! Could well be the case.
Zoot1530 wrote: » so a league table would look something like 1. Kearns 2. Clonakility 3.Tesco 4. Aldi 5.Olhausen 6.FX Buckleys 7.O'Flynns 8.Buckleys 9.Dennys 10.Galtee 11.Superquinn 12 M&S