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Need some ideas
slovelad
Posts: 1,742
how would you cook this? Just wondering if anyone has a cool or tasty twist to put on it.


Comments
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Slice it and cook on CI.
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Slow and brush several times with sauce, or wrap in baconTHANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER
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I have only sliced and fried, but it was good.
I would rather light a candle than curse your darkness.
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It's great just charred and sliced. If I were to kick it up, I would then simmer in some kraut.
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I go low and slow until it reaches a dark mahogany color normally takes about an hour indirect at 250

Hermosa Beach CA -
Well, last summer, I did this:
Smoked sausage stuffed with Manzano pepper, mozzarella and cheddar cheese.
Bacon-wrapped.
Yeah. I know it's crazy, but
you did ask.
"Too bad all the people who know how to run the country are busy driving cabs and barbecuing." - George Burns -
Our tailgate appetizer. Grill it to get a good char. Slice in bite size pieces and put in pan with 1/2 bottle wickers. Let that slowly cook down. Intensifies flavor. When done, pull and sprinkle your favorite bbq rub. Some cheese and crackers and a frosty mug of beer and you are set...
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Baked potato soup.... Add it in after smoking it.Green egg, dead animal and alcohol. The "Boro".. TN
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Nice work!Sardonicus said:
Well, last summer, I did this:
Smoked sausage stuffed with Manzano pepper, mozzarella and cheddar cheese.
Bacon-wrapped.
Yeah. I know it's crazy, but
you did ask.
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I go low and slow till it reaches a nice color. I cut into nice slices and serve with SC mustard BBQ Sauce and or Zatermarans Creole Mustard. It doesn't get much better .Ellijay GA with a Medium & MiniMax
Well, I married me a wife, she's been trouble all my life,
Run me out in the cold rain and snow -
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Lately I've been using my large cast iron skillet on the egg to cook it indirect.
The casing remains intact and the sausage is very juicy. -
Good idea!Biggreenpharmacist said:Pig Shots -
Best idea!pgprescott said:
Good idea!Biggreenpharmacist said:Pig ShotsSandy Springs & Dawsonville Ga -
I liked smoked sausage in my fried rice!------------------------------
Thomasville, NC
My YouTube Channel - The Hungry Hussey
Instagram
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My Photography Site -
I like a good smoked sausage, shrimp, and chicken jambalaya in my Dutch oven
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Red beans and rice with smoked sausage bites. Was introduced to this when we worked in Bay St. Louis after Katrina. We took back packing food intending to be entirely self-sufficient. But the locals had cleaned the school kitchen and someone was preparing meals there. They insisted if we were working, we were to eat with them. This was prepared a few times that week. Quite simple, but man, I think we got the long end of the stick. That is some good eating.
Tommy
Middle of Nowhere, Northern Kentucky
1 M, 1 XL, a BlackStone,1 old Webber, a Border Collie, a German Shepherd and 3 of her pups, and 2 Yorkies -
@FarmerTom do you have a recipe that you use
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Lowcountry Boil
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Biggreenpharmacist said:Pig Shots
That would be my choice.Living the good life smoking and joking -
last one of these i cooked i smoked a cabbage head by coring it, putting half stick of butter and some beef boulion inside, s&p on outside, and smoking it for 2-3 hours at 250-300ish. then the last 30 minutes i put the sausage on. once both were finished i diced it all up and mixed them together. didnt last 10 minutes on the table
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Check out the Hillshire Farms web site. This one sure looked good to me.Ellijay GA with a Medium & MiniMax
Well, I married me a wife, she's been trouble all my life,
Run me out in the cold rain and snow -
I grill it, then slice it and cook it in a little apple cider vinegar in CI skillet. I coat the tops with some type of rub and a light dusting with brown sugar to go along with the vinegar. Good stuff.
_________________________________________________________________________________________
Johnson, Navin R... Sounds like a typical bastard.
Belmont, NC
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So I went with ehat I thought was the safest route. Not sure why I hadn't thought of this before.
omlet, cubed up the sausage and added onion, green bell pepper, and mixed blend cheese. Awesome breakfast! And some sliced peaches on the side
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Sorry I'm so late seeing your reply. My wife cooks it (I'm not much of a cook, though I am beginning to expand my skills, such as they are). And I think she just does a some of this and some of that mixture. I'm sure there are some great southern chefs on here who either already have replied to your request or will soon. Wish I could give you a better answer. But I will say that for a simple meal with mostly cheap ingredients, it's hard to beat in my opinion.slovelad said:@FarmerTom do you have a recipe that you useTommy
Middle of Nowhere, Northern Kentucky
1 M, 1 XL, a BlackStone,1 old Webber, a Border Collie, a German Shepherd and 3 of her pups, and 2 Yorkies -
Tommy
Middle of Nowhere, Northern Kentucky
1 M, 1 XL, a BlackStone,1 old Webber, a Border Collie, a German Shepherd and 3 of her pups, and 2 Yorkies -
@sloveladslovelad said:@FarmerTom do you have a recipe that you use
Soak a pound of red beans overnight in red wine and water (about 1:1)
Slice and brown the sausage (1lb or so) and remove. In the same pot, add 2 onions chopped (with oil as necessary) and saute until they start to caramelize. Add one chopped bell pepper and about 5 ribs of celery (chopped - more celery than you would think) and cook until wilted. Add about 3 cloves of garlic chopped and go another minute or two.
Then drain and add your beans and just cover with chicken stock. Add plenty of thyme, S&P, a couple of bay leaves (I usually put the herbs in cheesecloth for easy removal later), cayenne to taste, a cup or so of red wine, a generous glug of Worcestershire. Add your sausage back into the mix.
Bring just to a boil and lower to a simmer and cook until beans are soft, usually at least 4 hours and as many as 8. Add more stock or water if necessary. For creamier beans, hit with a stick blender for a pulse or three (remove the bay leaves first) or mash beans against the side of the pot.
Adding some tasso to the recipe can add a nice smokey flavor, and traditionally, we will add pickled pork to the recipe to add a little more fat. Treat both meats the same way you treated the sausage.
Serve over rice.
NOLA -
Truer words have never been spoken.FarmerTom said:But I will say that for a simple meal with mostly cheap ingredients, it's hard to beat in my opinion.Ellijay GA with a Medium & MiniMax
Well, I married me a wife, she's been trouble all my life,
Run me out in the cold rain and snow -
Looks great @slovelad. Not to be nit-picky but I think those are nectarines
. Peaches are fuzzy. No inappropriate innuendo intended. Which came first the chicken or the egg? I egged the chicken and then I ate his leg. -
This thread is good example of why I like this forum. Honest question, followed by many clever answers.XL BGE; Medium BGE; L BGE
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