Saturday, December 28, 2013

Christmas Traditions: Making Swedish Potato Sausage- Potatis Korv

When I met my fiance he told me all about his mother's potato sausage.  Ms. Sue has been making her famous Swedish sausage every year at Christmas for years, and she started making it out of necessity.  The store where her mother bought it when she was a child stopped selling it.  Ms. Sue knew that she could figure out how to make it herself, and so this delicious Swedish family tradition began.   

At most family gatherings, you will typically find me in the kitchen offering to help.  This year I was offered an official position in the famous family sausage making process. Weeee!!! 


The first thing you have to do is find yourself a party bucket! I mean get yourself a REALLY large one.  Big enough you could probably let a small child go for a swim in it.  Then you're ready to get down to business.  



Potatis Korv - Swedish Potato Sausage 


3 lbs. ground chuck

3 lbs. ground pork 
12 large red or yukon gold potatoes
3 medium onions 
3 tbsp. salt
2 tbsp. pepper
10 feet of 4 1/2 inch pig casings 


Pour all of your ground meat into the party bucket.  





Grind potatoes in a potato grinder.  Drain excess water and add to your party bucket.  





Add onions to food processor and chop fine.  Add to the party bucket.  Do you see a theme here?  


Allow me to introduce the genius behind this yummy sausage...Ms. Sue who is adding the onions to the mixture.   





Add salt and pepper.   


Now get in there and make everybody get to know each other!  This part was a lot of fun!  I felt like a human mixer. 





Ok maybe I was having a little too much fun with this, but hey it IS a party bucket after all!  




Ms. Sue had the casings frozen in salt water.  She put them in the sink with warm water to defrost them.  Then she rinsed water through them.  She referred to this part as "making balloon animals".  Will you make me a reindeer please?    



  

Now time to assemble your sausage maker.  Fill the sausage stuffer with your meat mixture.  Do not fill too full!  I found if you do this it will come out the top when you start to make the sausage. That's how you learn right?  





Take the reindeer balloon, uh I mean casing and push the entire thing up onto the stem of the sausage stuffer.  





This is a two person job.  One person has to crank the sausage stuffer, and the other has to catch the sausage coming out the end and hold onto it as it enters the casing. You can control how big the sausage forms by applying pressure against the sausage as it comes out.  This is the part I'm gonna need a lot of practice to perfect. But as you can see Ms. Sue is an expert. 





Cut the casing with scissors, then tie off the end of the sausage in a knot.  Put the sausage link into water.  Then you can start another link.  Ms. Sue let me try the sausage shaping part of the process.  





Before the sausage stuffer Ms. Sue used to make the sausage by hand.  Can you believe she made yards of sausage with THIS tiny little contraption?  And she did this for years before deciding to invest in a sausage maker.  What once used to take her all day, now only takes a couple of hours.  




Isn't she cute?  Ms. Sue now jokes that she's going to pass down this archaic sausage stuffer to me so I can make my own sausage.  





Keep the sausage in cold water until you cook it so the potatoes don't turn brown.  





Put sausage links into a pot of water and bring to a boil. 





Boil the sausage for one hour, and while it boils poke each sausage with a sharp object to keep it from exploding.  You can see that one has exploded already.  I'm pretty sure that's the one that Ms. Sue let me make.  That's what you get with a sausage making rookie in the kitchen.  But no worries!  We made enough to feed the entire neighborhood!  





You can tell it's Sausage Time!  The Sweds are hovering...





Here is the finished Potatis Korv.  




It is served with Swedish Meatballs, fresh vegetables, and bread. 




All in all I think I did ok for my first time making Swedish potato sausage.  But the proof is in the puddin' as they say...




An empty pan is all that's left.  AND... I got an official thumbs up from the queen of Swedish potato sausage. 




What a wonderful time we had today.  I will treasure this memory all year until we get a chance to do it again next Christmas.  Thank you Ms. Sue for allowing this sausage rookie to get my hands in the party bucket and help you whip up a batch of your famous sausage.  I had a blast! 


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15 comments:

  1. Yummy. Sounds like a lot of work but worth it.

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  2. I have been eating for the better part of 40 years and my family recipe has lost something since my I first started eating my great grandmothers. I have never made and my father has taking the torch and started making. I know the recipe was never written down so It is not really his fault. do you cook your potatoes first?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Chad,
      What might be what was lost was allspice. The recipe from both sets of my grandparents who came over from Sweden called for it. Based on the amounts of meat/potato in the recipe in this post, it would take about 1 1/2 Tbs. of allspice. Our recipe also used white pepper which is a little stronger as opposed to black pepper.

      Delete
  3. Hi Chad! All ingredients go into the casing raw! Hope that helps, and Merry Christmas!

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  4. We also use allspice- 3T and 1 large onion. Kitchen Aid grinder attachment
    also includes sausage stuffer. I have the original cow horn (4" segment) that my grandmother used to use to hold the casing open.

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  5. Maybe I missed it, but where is the allspice? I remember making this as a kid. When grandma decided it was sausage making time it was a family affair. The only piece of equipment that was used was a hand cranked meat grinder. The job of the kids were to be the sausage stuffer's as our hands were smaller.

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  6. We cook it on the grill, our recipe also calls for alspice

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  7. Looks great. My next flavor of sausage I'll do. Seem very close to what pig maw taste like

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  8. My MIL (loved her so much!) taught me to make that traditional Swedish potato sausage AND cardamom breadmen and we had such a wonderful time! Miss her sooo much! Making the sausage this Christmas as it has been so long. Hope her spirit is with me when I cook!

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    Replies
    1. I loved the cardamom bread! Do you have a recipe to share?

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  9. Me again! No ketchup allowed!

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  10. Do you add bay leaves, onion or peppercorn to the boiling water? I seem to remember my grandmother doing so.

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  11. Looks great. I bought some from the store and wondering should I serve it cold or hot.

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    Replies
    1. It can be served both ways. Hot as part of dinner or cold cut into small pieces on a plate with toothpicks.
      We also like it made into patties and fried. That has to be done before the mixture is put into the casings.

      Delete

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