Cured Meats & Food Preservation > Charcuterie: Ham, Bacon, Sausage, etc.

Texas Beef Sausage

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cookiecdcmk:
i Have made some sausage with pork and lamb to pretty good success.  MY efforts at Texas beef sausage had not been good.  Does anyone have a good recipe and procedure to make some good beef sausage?

IR2dum:
Carl, I can give you the exact recipe for Central Texas beef sausage from Smitty's in Lockhart. They make the best and it is actually pretty simple. This came straight from the guy actually making the sausage at Smitty's as I was watching him.

85% beef (they use brisket trimmings)
15% pork (mostly pork fat)
1 part Salt
3 parts course Black Pepper
A little Cayenne Pepper to taste

That's it. No curing salts or any other spices. Put it on the smoker as soon as it is stuffed and take it to about 160 degrees internal. The guy doing the smoking didn't know how hot his smoker was, but he thought it was running about 210 to 220 degrees. He experimented with the cayenne until he got the taste that he wanted. It shouldn't be too spicey cayenne hot but mostly a peppery hot. They call these Texas Hot Guts for a reason. The sausage tastes wonderful right off the smoker, but you can freeze them and they still taste good when thawed.

I tried this recipe and I think that I got pretty close to the taste of Smitty's (and almost all central Texas sausage).  A few years ago, I brought one batch of this recipe to Jaxon's Cookout in Byron, GA to share with all my BBQ friends that I have met on this forum and nobody complained about it. (At least not to my face.) Now they did complain about the dry aged brisket I brought that was supposed to go along with the sausage for a true Texas BBQ meal, but that's another story that Turtle loves to tell over and over (and I'm sure he will).

Good luck with your try at Texas Beef Sausage. When you get it just right, it will taste spectacular. I'll be pulling for you.


cookiecdcmk:
Thanks Don.  My old result was a dry crumbly sausage, not the juicy, tasty ones I have had in Texas.  I saw some recipes on the Google, but wanted to find one from here.

Pam Gould:

--- Quote from: IR2dum on October 21, 2022, 03:26:47 AM ---Carl, I can give you the exact recipe for Central Texas beef sausage from Smitty's in Lockhart. They make the best and it is actually pretty simple. This came straight from the guy actually making the sausage at Smitty's as I was watching him.

85% beef (they use brisket trimmings)
15% pork (mostly pork fat)
1 part Salt
3 parts course Black Pepper
A little Cayenne Pepper to taste

That's it. No curing salts or any other spices. Put it on the smoker as soon as it is stuffed and take it to about 160 degrees internal. The guy doing the smoking didn't know how hot his smoker was, but he thought it was running about 210 to 220 degrees. He experimented with the cayenne until he got the taste that he wanted. It shouldn't be too spicey cayenne hot but mostly a peppery hot. They call these Texas Hot Guts for a reason. The sausage tastes wonderful right off the smoker, but you can freeze them and they still taste good when thawed.

I tried this recipe and I think that I got pretty close to the taste of Smitty's (and almost all central Texas sausage).  A few years ago, I brought one batch of this recipe to Jaxon's Cookout in Byron, GA to share with all my BBQ friends that I have met on this forum and nobody complained about it. (At least not to my face.) Now they did complain about the dry aged brisket I brought that was supposed to go along with the sausage for a true Texas BBQ meal, but that's another story that Turtle loves to tell over and over (and I'm sure he will).

Good luck with your try at Texas Beef Sausage. When you get it just right, it will taste spectacular. I'll be pulling for you.

--- End quote ---

Don..how much is a part? I like the seasoning plain like this. Thanks for the recipe.  Pammie

Ka Honu:

--- Quote from: IR2dum on October 21, 2022, 03:26:47 AM ---...Now they did complain about the dry aged brisket I brought that was supposed to go along with the sausage for a true Texas BBQ meal, but that's another story that Turtle loves to tell over and over (and I'm sure he will).
--- End quote ---

But, luckily for you (and all our brethren and sistren), not today.

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