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I had my first go at smoked sausage on the FE and they are delicious. I HATED stuffing them with my Kitchenaid, although it did a fine job of grinding. The stuffer is just WAY too slow and labor intensive for two people. The pusher is too narrow and lets meat push up out of the feed tube. I found myself constantly re-inserting meat that should have gone thru the first time.

So I went on line and bought a gorgeous stuffer made in the USA by Sausage Maker from Allied Kenko. Holds 5 lbs of meat---nice size for home use---and has received a lot of recommendations from other smokers. Also bought some hog casings and a triple Arkansas stone knife sharpener. I now have no money left to buy meat.
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That's the one, Tom.

I did hang the sausages. I gotta get a new system, although this one worked pretty well. I left the top rack in and hung S hooks from various points and strung the sausages over the hooks and let them hang down.

I don't know what kind of sausages these would be. I just liked the ingredients and tossed them together. Even my wife, who isn't really big on sausage, loved em.

Here's what they were made from:

10 lb Country Style spare ribs, ground with the small plate;
2 big onions, ground with the same plate;
30 cloves of garlic, also ground;
1 C chopped parsley
3 tsp thyme
3 T fennel seeds
3T Kosher salt
1T black pepper
red pepper flakes to taste
35mm hog casings

This is how I did it. There are probably other ways that could be better.

Stuff the sausage into the casings and hang to dry in a very cool place (I used the front of my frig) overnight. I hear that to smoke properly the sausages should be nice and dry. Some people hang them in a cool place and put a fan on them for a few hours or over night. I don't have that kind of luxury, since our weather isn't often below 40 degrees so my attic, for example, is too warm.

Prick the sausages 5-6 times with a tooth pick or fine pointed skewer (the bamboo ones used for grilling shrimp etc work great. Smoke for an hour or so on "smoke" then crank it to 275 until the sausages reach 155 degrees. (I fed the sensor thru the exhaust and inserted the probe into a middle area sausage.) Having read about "showering" to cool them down to prevent wrinkling, I took them immediately into the freshly cleaned kitchen sink and turned on the hose-end sprayer and doused them until they cooled off a bit (somebody said 120 degrees---I didn't measure). I blotted them dry, cut them into individual links and vacuum packed them by 4s and into the freezer. Kept out a meal's worth and had them that night. VERY good with a side of Dijon mustard.

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