Description

Book Synopsis
Discover how to butcher your own meat and make homemade sausage

With interest in a back-to-basics approach to food on the rise, more and more people are becoming interested in butchering their own meat and making high-quality, preservative-free sausages.

With easy-to-follow instructions and illustrations, Butchery & Sausage-Making For Dummies offers readers a look at how to butcher poultry, rabbit, beef, pork, lamb, and goats. The book will also explore sausage-making, with tips and recipes, and will look at preserving meat through curing and smoking.

  • Offers natural, healthier alternatives for sausages and preserved meats for people wary of processed foods
  • Provides helpful tips and guidance for home cooks and beginner butchers
  • Provides needed guidance for those looking to explore this long-overlooked profession

Butchery & Sausage Making For Dummies is an invaluable resource for home cooks interested in being m

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Conventions Used in This Book 2

What You’re Not to Read 2

Foolish Assumptions 3

How This Book is Organized 3

Part I: Time to Meet Your Meat! 3

Part II: Poultry, Rabbit, and Lamb Butchery 4

Part III: Pork Butchery 4

Part IV: Beef Butchery 4

Part V: Sausage-Making and Using the Whole Animal 4

Part VI: The Part of Tens 5

Icons Used in This Book 5

Where to Go from Here 5

Part I: Time to Meet Your Meat! 7

Chapter 1: The Butchery Room 9

Understanding the Importance of Ye Ol’ Butcher Shoppe 10

Identifying what butchers do 11

Patronizing your local shop 14

Assuming the Role of Butcher in Your Own Home 14

Knowledge and equipment you need 15

The benefits of butchering your own meat 15

Preserving Traditions: Sausage-Making and Other Preservation Methods 17

Making sausage 17

Other preservation techniques 19

Promoting Healthy Food Systems 19

Chapter 2: Meat is Meat, Right? Wrong! 21

Knowing What You’re Getting 21

You say “tomato”; I say “porcupine” — Playing the name game 22

Think cooking instead of cutting 22

Deciphering labels 24

Focusing on Flavor 26

The amount and kind of fat 26

The age of the animal 28

The meat’s grade 28

Whether the meat is dry or wet aged 29

Ensuring you get the best flavor 30

Broadening Your Definition of “Good” 31

Chapter 3: Cuts and Terminology: The Basics of Butchery 33

Breaking It Down the Easy Way: Meat Maps 34

Making Heads or Tails of Butchery Terminology 36

Keeping track of body parts and positions 36

Understanding cut terminology 38

Breaking news: Bench (or table) or hanging 38

Sourcing the Freshest Cuts from the Supplier or Meat Counter 39

Finding a reputable supplier 39

Judging freshness at the meat counter 40

Identifying standard and specialty cuts 41

Substituting Cuts in Recipe Planning 41

Braising, slow cooking cuts 41

Grilling or quick-searing cuts 42

Roasting cuts 43

Chapter 4: Basic Knife Skills, Tools, and Techniques 45

Knives, Mallets, and More: Gathering Your Butchery Tools 46

The essential cutting implements 46

Other necessary items 48

Useful but nonessential items 49

Making Confident and Fluid Cuts: Basic Grips and Posture 49

Get a grip! Holding your knife properly 50

Maintaining good posture 52

Special Techniques Every Butcher Should Know 53

Denuding 53

Cutting steaks 54

Frenching 55

Butterflying 56

Cubing meats for braising 58

Being Safe While Using Sharp Pointy Metal Tools 58

Part II: Poultry, Rabbit, and Lamb Butchery 61

Chapter 5: Duck, Duck, Goose, Chickens: Starting with Poultry 63

A Word about Cutting Up Birds 64

Getting familiar with poultry musculature 65

Basic chicken-butchering tools and techniques 66

Pieces of Eight: Cutting Up a Fryer 67

Removing the head and feet 67

Removing the wings 68

Removing the legs 69

Cutting out the spine 70

Splitting the breast 72

Dividing the legs into two pieces 73

Finishing up 73

Cutting the Chicken into Five Equal Portions 74

Freeing the oysters 74

Removing the legs and spine 75

Sectioning the wing portions 76

Making Boneless, Skinless Chicken Pieces 77

Removing the skin 77

Cutting up the skinned chicken 78

Deboning the breast 78

Deboning the thigh and drumsticks 79

Impressing Your Neighbors: Boneless Chicken Halves 81

Chapter 6: What’s Up, Doc? Rascally Rabbits! 85

Cutting Up Fryers and Roasters 85

Removing the offal and silver skin 86

Removing the back legs 87

Removing the front legs 88

Cutting through the ribs 88

Removing the pelvis 90

Sectioning the saddle 90

Portioning the loin 91

Finishing up the rack 92

Deboning the Rabbit 93

Removing the rib cage 94

Cutting out the skeleton 95

Removing the leg bones 96

Removing the arm bones 97

Chapter 7: Baaaaack to Basics: Lamb and Goat Butchery 99

Getting to Know Your Little Bovids 99

The lowdown on lamb 100

Getting (to know) your goat 100

Covering Lamb and Goat Butchery Basics 101

On the bench or on the hook? 101

The cuts 101

Dealing with the Neck/Shoulder 104

Slicing the Skirt Free 105

Removing the Flank 106

Two Tasks in One: Removing the Breast and Foreshank 107

Removing the foreshank 107

Removing the breast 108

Removing the Hindshanks 109

Using a saw to remove the hindshank 109

Using a boning knife to remove the hindshank 110

Removing the Shoulder 111

The Leg 112

Removing the legs from the loin 112

Sawing the legs in two 114

Working with the Rib 115

Separating the rib from the loin 115

Chining the rib 116

Cutting Denver ribs 118

Portioning the rib chops 118

The Loin 119

Part III: Pork Butchery 121

Chapter 8: Porky Pig: Understanding the Beast 123

Pork and Pigs: Getting to Know the Beast 124

Pork production 125

Weighty matters: Making sense of pork poundage 125

Pork’s USDA identification categories 125

Fundamentals of Pork Butchery 126

Inspecting the carcass 126

Paying attention to safety issues 127

Getting Familiar with Pig Primals, Subprimals, and Retail Cuts 127

First and second cuts: Primals and subprimals 127

The retail cuts 129

Chapter 9: Pork: Cutting It Up 133

A Bit of Advice before You Begin 133

Removing the Head 134

Removing the Front Trotters (Feet) 136

Removing the trotters with your boning knife 136

Removing the trotters by sawing 137

Removing the Foreshanks 138

Splitting the Breast-plate 139

Dealing with the Shoulders 140

Removing the shoulders 140

Splitting the shoulders in two 142

Trim work: Cleaning up the shoulder 143

Removing the Hind Trotters 143

Sectioning the Legs from the Loin 144

Freeing the legs from the belly 144

Separating the loin from the legs 145

Sawing the legs in two 146

Removing the Pork Skirt Steaks 147

Cutting the Belly from the Loin 148

Chapter 10: Moving into Pork Subprimals 151

From the Shoulder: The Boston Butt and Pork Shoulder (Picnic) 152

Separating the Boston butt from the picnic 152

Making retails cuts from the picnic 156

Producing Retails Cuts from the Loin 158

Cutting center loin chops 158

Boneless loin roast and chops 161

Baby back ribs 164

Removing the tenderloin 165

Porterhouse or T-bone steaks 166

Getting Great Cuts from the Leg (or Ham) 167

Spareribs from the Pork Belly 169

Trimming Meat for Grind 170

Part IV: Beef Butchery 173

Chapter 11: What’s Your Beef? Understanding the Cuts 175

The Lowdown on Beef Butchery 175

Muscles matter! Paying attention to beef musculature 176

Maximizing flavor and tenderness 177

Playing it safe 178

Dividing Up the Task: Primals, Subprimals, and Retail Cuts 178

Forequarter and hindquarter primals and subprimals 179

The retail cuts 180

Chapter 12: Beef: The Forequarter 185

Breaking the Forequarter: The Basics 185

Fashioning a hook and rail 186

Cutting on the rail 187

Removing the Outside Skirt (Rail) 189

Separating Out the Chuck, Arm, and Brisket from the Plate and Rib (Rail) 190

Step 1: Marking the chuck and rib 191

Step 2: Separating the rib from the chuck 192

Step 3: Scoring the brisket 193

Step 4: Removing the arm from the chuck 193

Step 5: Removing the brisket 195

Step 6: Removing the neck meat and atlas joint 196

Step 7: Removing the flat iron 197

Step 8: Removing the chuck 198

Squaring Up the Chuck Short Ribs (Rail) 199

Sectioning the Rib from the Plate (Rail) 201

Trimming the Brisket (Bench) 202

Trimming the Flat Iron (Bench) 203

Removing the Foreshank (Bench) 205

Cutting the foreshank from the arm 205

Osso bucco 206

The Arm/Shoulder Clod (Bench) 206

Removing the arm bone 207

Extracting the petite filet 208

Preparing a cross rib roast 209

Tying the arm roast 210

The Rib and Bone-in Ribeye Steaks (Bench) 210

Cutting bone-in rib eyes 210

Frenching the bone-in rib eye 211

Chuck Short Ribs (Bench) 212

Fabricating the chuck roll 212

Seaming out the mock tender 213

Removing the neck and spine 214

The last stages of the chuck 216

On the Bench: The Plate 217

Removing the inside skirt 217

Cutting the short ribs 217

Cleaning the breastbones 219

Chapter 13: Beef: The Hindquarter 221

Breaking the Hindquarter: The Basics 221

Removing the Elephant Ear (Rail) 223

Pulling the Cod Fat (Rail) 224

Dealing with the Flank 225

Removing the flank (rail) 225

Freeing the flank steak (bench) 226

Pulling the Tri-Tip (Rail) 227

Removing the Full Loin (Rail) 228

Removing and Portioning the Round (Rail) 230

Removing the knuckle from the round 230

Cutting the top sirloin free from the round 231

Removing the gooseneck (bottom round) 233

Cutting the Full Loin Down (Bench) 234

Removing the flank from the full loin 234

Seaming out the inside skirt 235

Seaming out the bottom sirloin flap (bavette steak) 236

Cutting the Tri-Tip Free (Bench) 237

Separating the Short Loin from the Sirloin (Bench) 238

Taking Care of the Top Sirloin (Bench) 239

Removing the head filet 239

Deboning the top sirloin 240

Cutting Steaks from the Short Loin (Bench) 241

Cutting bone-in steaks 242

Frenching the bone-in steaks 242

Producing Osso Bucco from the Hindshank (Bench) 243

Part V: Sausage-Making and Using the Whole Animal 245

Chapter 14: Setting Yourself Up for Sausage 247

Gathering the Right Equipment 247

Thinking about your sausage-making needs 248

Choosing a grinder 248

Looking at mixers 249

Have stuffer, will sausage 251

Other essentials 252

A word about casings 252

Picking from a Plethora of Sausages 254

Common sausage flavor combos 254

Types of sausages 255

Chapter 15: Sausage-Making Techniques 257

Getting in Touch with Your Inner Nerd: Sausage Science 257

Using quality ingredients 258

Getting the right amount of moisture 258

Achieving the right texture 259

Ensuring a good bind 259

Using the proper technique 260

Fermented sausages and guarding against botulism 261

Making Sausage: The Basic Steps 262

Gathering your ingredients 262

Preparing the meat for grinding 264

Chilling the meat before grinding and mixing 265

Grinding and mixing your sausage 265

Stuffing the sausage into the casing 268

Tying the knot: Linking and drying sausages 269

Hanging your links to dry 270

Storing Your Sausage 271

Chapter 16: Scrumptious Sausage Recipes 273

Chicken and Rabbit Sausage 274

Beef Sausage 280

Pork Sausage 285

Lamb and Goat Sausage 294

Chapter 17: Processing Techniques: The Good Kind 299

Whole-Muscle Curing 299

Following the general process 300

Identifying the equipment you need 301

Ensuring safe curing practices 302

Time for the cure 303

Smoke ’Em If You Got ’Em 305

Gathering (or building) your equipment 305

Choosing your wood chips 306

Smoking tips 307

Making bacon 307

From Scraps to Elegant Dining: Pâté, Terrines, and More 307

Making a meat paste: Pâtés 308

Creating scrumptious layers: Terrines 308

Upping the elegance factor: Galantines 309

Stocks and Sauces: It’s All Gravy, Baby 309

The secrets to a solid stock 310

Whipping up a hearty sauce 311

Praise the Lard, Save the Fats 312

Part VI: The Part of Tens 313

Chapter 18: Top Ten Mistakes to Avoid When Butchering 315

Keeping a Messy Workspace 315

Letting Your Meat Get Warm 316

Not Following the Separation of Time or Space Rule 316

Not Watching Your Posture 316

Improperly Storing Your Meat 317

Letting Your Knives Get Dull 318

Wasting Perfectly Useful Scrap 318

Rushing through the Process 318

Being Careless or Distracted 319

Being Fearful 319

Chapter 19: Top Ten Grilling Cuts 321

Chicken — The Whole Thing, Every Last Part 321

Ribs, Any Kind 322

Hamburgers, That Glorious Staple 322

Show Me Some Leg, Lamb 323

Flat Steaks and Their Three-Dimensional Flavor 323

Pork Chops — Brine and Shine 324

Flat Iron, a Butchers’ Discovery 324

Lamb Saratoga, a Treasure Seeker’s Prize 324

Strip Steak, America’s Sweetheart 325

The Rib Eye — There, I’ve Said It 325

Chapter 20: Ten Sssshhhhausage-Making Secrets 327

Keep It Cool 327

Keep It Clean 328

Keep Notes 328

Grind It Right 328

Get in the Mix 329

Test the Texture and Taste 329

Hone Your Stuffing Technique 330

Practice Linking Tricks 331

Store the Sausage Properly 331

Use Quality Seasonings 331

Index 333

Butchery and SausageMaking for Dummies

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    A Paperback / softback by Tia Harrison

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      View other formats and editions of Butchery and SausageMaking for Dummies by Tia Harrison

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 16/04/2013
      ISBN13: 9781118374948, 978-1118374948
      ISBN10: 1118374940

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Discover how to butcher your own meat and make homemade sausage

      With interest in a back-to-basics approach to food on the rise, more and more people are becoming interested in butchering their own meat and making high-quality, preservative-free sausages.

      With easy-to-follow instructions and illustrations, Butchery & Sausage-Making For Dummies offers readers a look at how to butcher poultry, rabbit, beef, pork, lamb, and goats. The book will also explore sausage-making, with tips and recipes, and will look at preserving meat through curing and smoking.

      • Offers natural, healthier alternatives for sausages and preserved meats for people wary of processed foods
      • Provides helpful tips and guidance for home cooks and beginner butchers
      • Provides needed guidance for those looking to explore this long-overlooked profession

      Butchery & Sausage Making For Dummies is an invaluable resource for home cooks interested in being m

      Table of Contents

      Introduction 1

      About This Book 1

      Conventions Used in This Book 2

      What You’re Not to Read 2

      Foolish Assumptions 3

      How This Book is Organized 3

      Part I: Time to Meet Your Meat! 3

      Part II: Poultry, Rabbit, and Lamb Butchery 4

      Part III: Pork Butchery 4

      Part IV: Beef Butchery 4

      Part V: Sausage-Making and Using the Whole Animal 4

      Part VI: The Part of Tens 5

      Icons Used in This Book 5

      Where to Go from Here 5

      Part I: Time to Meet Your Meat! 7

      Chapter 1: The Butchery Room 9

      Understanding the Importance of Ye Ol’ Butcher Shoppe 10

      Identifying what butchers do 11

      Patronizing your local shop 14

      Assuming the Role of Butcher in Your Own Home 14

      Knowledge and equipment you need 15

      The benefits of butchering your own meat 15

      Preserving Traditions: Sausage-Making and Other Preservation Methods 17

      Making sausage 17

      Other preservation techniques 19

      Promoting Healthy Food Systems 19

      Chapter 2: Meat is Meat, Right? Wrong! 21

      Knowing What You’re Getting 21

      You say “tomato”; I say “porcupine” — Playing the name game 22

      Think cooking instead of cutting 22

      Deciphering labels 24

      Focusing on Flavor 26

      The amount and kind of fat 26

      The age of the animal 28

      The meat’s grade 28

      Whether the meat is dry or wet aged 29

      Ensuring you get the best flavor 30

      Broadening Your Definition of “Good” 31

      Chapter 3: Cuts and Terminology: The Basics of Butchery 33

      Breaking It Down the Easy Way: Meat Maps 34

      Making Heads or Tails of Butchery Terminology 36

      Keeping track of body parts and positions 36

      Understanding cut terminology 38

      Breaking news: Bench (or table) or hanging 38

      Sourcing the Freshest Cuts from the Supplier or Meat Counter 39

      Finding a reputable supplier 39

      Judging freshness at the meat counter 40

      Identifying standard and specialty cuts 41

      Substituting Cuts in Recipe Planning 41

      Braising, slow cooking cuts 41

      Grilling or quick-searing cuts 42

      Roasting cuts 43

      Chapter 4: Basic Knife Skills, Tools, and Techniques 45

      Knives, Mallets, and More: Gathering Your Butchery Tools 46

      The essential cutting implements 46

      Other necessary items 48

      Useful but nonessential items 49

      Making Confident and Fluid Cuts: Basic Grips and Posture 49

      Get a grip! Holding your knife properly 50

      Maintaining good posture 52

      Special Techniques Every Butcher Should Know 53

      Denuding 53

      Cutting steaks 54

      Frenching 55

      Butterflying 56

      Cubing meats for braising 58

      Being Safe While Using Sharp Pointy Metal Tools 58

      Part II: Poultry, Rabbit, and Lamb Butchery 61

      Chapter 5: Duck, Duck, Goose, Chickens: Starting with Poultry 63

      A Word about Cutting Up Birds 64

      Getting familiar with poultry musculature 65

      Basic chicken-butchering tools and techniques 66

      Pieces of Eight: Cutting Up a Fryer 67

      Removing the head and feet 67

      Removing the wings 68

      Removing the legs 69

      Cutting out the spine 70

      Splitting the breast 72

      Dividing the legs into two pieces 73

      Finishing up 73

      Cutting the Chicken into Five Equal Portions 74

      Freeing the oysters 74

      Removing the legs and spine 75

      Sectioning the wing portions 76

      Making Boneless, Skinless Chicken Pieces 77

      Removing the skin 77

      Cutting up the skinned chicken 78

      Deboning the breast 78

      Deboning the thigh and drumsticks 79

      Impressing Your Neighbors: Boneless Chicken Halves 81

      Chapter 6: What’s Up, Doc? Rascally Rabbits! 85

      Cutting Up Fryers and Roasters 85

      Removing the offal and silver skin 86

      Removing the back legs 87

      Removing the front legs 88

      Cutting through the ribs 88

      Removing the pelvis 90

      Sectioning the saddle 90

      Portioning the loin 91

      Finishing up the rack 92

      Deboning the Rabbit 93

      Removing the rib cage 94

      Cutting out the skeleton 95

      Removing the leg bones 96

      Removing the arm bones 97

      Chapter 7: Baaaaack to Basics: Lamb and Goat Butchery 99

      Getting to Know Your Little Bovids 99

      The lowdown on lamb 100

      Getting (to know) your goat 100

      Covering Lamb and Goat Butchery Basics 101

      On the bench or on the hook? 101

      The cuts 101

      Dealing with the Neck/Shoulder 104

      Slicing the Skirt Free 105

      Removing the Flank 106

      Two Tasks in One: Removing the Breast and Foreshank 107

      Removing the foreshank 107

      Removing the breast 108

      Removing the Hindshanks 109

      Using a saw to remove the hindshank 109

      Using a boning knife to remove the hindshank 110

      Removing the Shoulder 111

      The Leg 112

      Removing the legs from the loin 112

      Sawing the legs in two 114

      Working with the Rib 115

      Separating the rib from the loin 115

      Chining the rib 116

      Cutting Denver ribs 118

      Portioning the rib chops 118

      The Loin 119

      Part III: Pork Butchery 121

      Chapter 8: Porky Pig: Understanding the Beast 123

      Pork and Pigs: Getting to Know the Beast 124

      Pork production 125

      Weighty matters: Making sense of pork poundage 125

      Pork’s USDA identification categories 125

      Fundamentals of Pork Butchery 126

      Inspecting the carcass 126

      Paying attention to safety issues 127

      Getting Familiar with Pig Primals, Subprimals, and Retail Cuts 127

      First and second cuts: Primals and subprimals 127

      The retail cuts 129

      Chapter 9: Pork: Cutting It Up 133

      A Bit of Advice before You Begin 133

      Removing the Head 134

      Removing the Front Trotters (Feet) 136

      Removing the trotters with your boning knife 136

      Removing the trotters by sawing 137

      Removing the Foreshanks 138

      Splitting the Breast-plate 139

      Dealing with the Shoulders 140

      Removing the shoulders 140

      Splitting the shoulders in two 142

      Trim work: Cleaning up the shoulder 143

      Removing the Hind Trotters 143

      Sectioning the Legs from the Loin 144

      Freeing the legs from the belly 144

      Separating the loin from the legs 145

      Sawing the legs in two 146

      Removing the Pork Skirt Steaks 147

      Cutting the Belly from the Loin 148

      Chapter 10: Moving into Pork Subprimals 151

      From the Shoulder: The Boston Butt and Pork Shoulder (Picnic) 152

      Separating the Boston butt from the picnic 152

      Making retails cuts from the picnic 156

      Producing Retails Cuts from the Loin 158

      Cutting center loin chops 158

      Boneless loin roast and chops 161

      Baby back ribs 164

      Removing the tenderloin 165

      Porterhouse or T-bone steaks 166

      Getting Great Cuts from the Leg (or Ham) 167

      Spareribs from the Pork Belly 169

      Trimming Meat for Grind 170

      Part IV: Beef Butchery 173

      Chapter 11: What’s Your Beef? Understanding the Cuts 175

      The Lowdown on Beef Butchery 175

      Muscles matter! Paying attention to beef musculature 176

      Maximizing flavor and tenderness 177

      Playing it safe 178

      Dividing Up the Task: Primals, Subprimals, and Retail Cuts 178

      Forequarter and hindquarter primals and subprimals 179

      The retail cuts 180

      Chapter 12: Beef: The Forequarter 185

      Breaking the Forequarter: The Basics 185

      Fashioning a hook and rail 186

      Cutting on the rail 187

      Removing the Outside Skirt (Rail) 189

      Separating Out the Chuck, Arm, and Brisket from the Plate and Rib (Rail) 190

      Step 1: Marking the chuck and rib 191

      Step 2: Separating the rib from the chuck 192

      Step 3: Scoring the brisket 193

      Step 4: Removing the arm from the chuck 193

      Step 5: Removing the brisket 195

      Step 6: Removing the neck meat and atlas joint 196

      Step 7: Removing the flat iron 197

      Step 8: Removing the chuck 198

      Squaring Up the Chuck Short Ribs (Rail) 199

      Sectioning the Rib from the Plate (Rail) 201

      Trimming the Brisket (Bench) 202

      Trimming the Flat Iron (Bench) 203

      Removing the Foreshank (Bench) 205

      Cutting the foreshank from the arm 205

      Osso bucco 206

      The Arm/Shoulder Clod (Bench) 206

      Removing the arm bone 207

      Extracting the petite filet 208

      Preparing a cross rib roast 209

      Tying the arm roast 210

      The Rib and Bone-in Ribeye Steaks (Bench) 210

      Cutting bone-in rib eyes 210

      Frenching the bone-in rib eye 211

      Chuck Short Ribs (Bench) 212

      Fabricating the chuck roll 212

      Seaming out the mock tender 213

      Removing the neck and spine 214

      The last stages of the chuck 216

      On the Bench: The Plate 217

      Removing the inside skirt 217

      Cutting the short ribs 217

      Cleaning the breastbones 219

      Chapter 13: Beef: The Hindquarter 221

      Breaking the Hindquarter: The Basics 221

      Removing the Elephant Ear (Rail) 223

      Pulling the Cod Fat (Rail) 224

      Dealing with the Flank 225

      Removing the flank (rail) 225

      Freeing the flank steak (bench) 226

      Pulling the Tri-Tip (Rail) 227

      Removing the Full Loin (Rail) 228

      Removing and Portioning the Round (Rail) 230

      Removing the knuckle from the round 230

      Cutting the top sirloin free from the round 231

      Removing the gooseneck (bottom round) 233

      Cutting the Full Loin Down (Bench) 234

      Removing the flank from the full loin 234

      Seaming out the inside skirt 235

      Seaming out the bottom sirloin flap (bavette steak) 236

      Cutting the Tri-Tip Free (Bench) 237

      Separating the Short Loin from the Sirloin (Bench) 238

      Taking Care of the Top Sirloin (Bench) 239

      Removing the head filet 239

      Deboning the top sirloin 240

      Cutting Steaks from the Short Loin (Bench) 241

      Cutting bone-in steaks 242

      Frenching the bone-in steaks 242

      Producing Osso Bucco from the Hindshank (Bench) 243

      Part V: Sausage-Making and Using the Whole Animal 245

      Chapter 14: Setting Yourself Up for Sausage 247

      Gathering the Right Equipment 247

      Thinking about your sausage-making needs 248

      Choosing a grinder 248

      Looking at mixers 249

      Have stuffer, will sausage 251

      Other essentials 252

      A word about casings 252

      Picking from a Plethora of Sausages 254

      Common sausage flavor combos 254

      Types of sausages 255

      Chapter 15: Sausage-Making Techniques 257

      Getting in Touch with Your Inner Nerd: Sausage Science 257

      Using quality ingredients 258

      Getting the right amount of moisture 258

      Achieving the right texture 259

      Ensuring a good bind 259

      Using the proper technique 260

      Fermented sausages and guarding against botulism 261

      Making Sausage: The Basic Steps 262

      Gathering your ingredients 262

      Preparing the meat for grinding 264

      Chilling the meat before grinding and mixing 265

      Grinding and mixing your sausage 265

      Stuffing the sausage into the casing 268

      Tying the knot: Linking and drying sausages 269

      Hanging your links to dry 270

      Storing Your Sausage 271

      Chapter 16: Scrumptious Sausage Recipes 273

      Chicken and Rabbit Sausage 274

      Beef Sausage 280

      Pork Sausage 285

      Lamb and Goat Sausage 294

      Chapter 17: Processing Techniques: The Good Kind 299

      Whole-Muscle Curing 299

      Following the general process 300

      Identifying the equipment you need 301

      Ensuring safe curing practices 302

      Time for the cure 303

      Smoke ’Em If You Got ’Em 305

      Gathering (or building) your equipment 305

      Choosing your wood chips 306

      Smoking tips 307

      Making bacon 307

      From Scraps to Elegant Dining: Pâté, Terrines, and More 307

      Making a meat paste: Pâtés 308

      Creating scrumptious layers: Terrines 308

      Upping the elegance factor: Galantines 309

      Stocks and Sauces: It’s All Gravy, Baby 309

      The secrets to a solid stock 310

      Whipping up a hearty sauce 311

      Praise the Lard, Save the Fats 312

      Part VI: The Part of Tens 313

      Chapter 18: Top Ten Mistakes to Avoid When Butchering 315

      Keeping a Messy Workspace 315

      Letting Your Meat Get Warm 316

      Not Following the Separation of Time or Space Rule 316

      Not Watching Your Posture 316

      Improperly Storing Your Meat 317

      Letting Your Knives Get Dull 318

      Wasting Perfectly Useful Scrap 318

      Rushing through the Process 318

      Being Careless or Distracted 319

      Being Fearful 319

      Chapter 19: Top Ten Grilling Cuts 321

      Chicken — The Whole Thing, Every Last Part 321

      Ribs, Any Kind 322

      Hamburgers, That Glorious Staple 322

      Show Me Some Leg, Lamb 323

      Flat Steaks and Their Three-Dimensional Flavor 323

      Pork Chops — Brine and Shine 324

      Flat Iron, a Butchers’ Discovery 324

      Lamb Saratoga, a Treasure Seeker’s Prize 324

      Strip Steak, America’s Sweetheart 325

      The Rib Eye — There, I’ve Said It 325

      Chapter 20: Ten Sssshhhhausage-Making Secrets 327

      Keep It Cool 327

      Keep It Clean 328

      Keep Notes 328

      Grind It Right 328

      Get in the Mix 329

      Test the Texture and Taste 329

      Hone Your Stuffing Technique 330

      Practice Linking Tricks 331

      Store the Sausage Properly 331

      Use Quality Seasonings 331

      Index 333

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