Chapters · Advanced Techniques
Roasted Green Chile Sausage
The culmination — fermentation, curing, sous vide, consommé, and the creative freedom to compose your own dishes.

Foundations Referenced
- → Spice Blends (custom blend below)
- → Techniques — mise en place
Ingredients
- 2 lbs pork shoulder, cut into 1" cubes, partially frozen
- 4 oz pork fatback, cubed, partially frozen
- 4 roasted Hatch or Anaheim green chiles, peeled, seeded, diced
- 2 garlic cloves, minced
- 1 tbsp kosher salt
- 1 tsp black pepper
- 1 tsp cumin
- 1/2 tsp coriander
- 1/4 tsp cayenne
- 2 tbsp ice water
- Natural hog casings, soaked in water 30 min (or make patties)
Equipment
- Meat grinder with medium (3/8") die
- Sausage stuffer attachment (or stuff by hand with a funnel)
Method
-
Chill everything: Grinder parts, bowl, meat — all should be near-frozen. Warm fat smears instead of cutting cleanly, ruining the texture.
-
Grind: Pass pork and fatback through medium die into a chilled bowl set over ice.
-
Mix: Add chiles, garlic, spices, and ice water. Mix with your hands or paddle attachment until the mixture is tacky and binds to itself when pressed (this develops myosin — the protein that gives sausage its snap).
-
Test: Pinch off a small piece, flatten into a patty, cook in a skillet. Taste and adjust seasoning. This step is non-negotiable — you can't fix seasoning after stuffing.
-
Stuff (if using casings): Thread soaked casing onto stuffer nozzle. Fill evenly, avoiding air pockets. Twist into 5–6" links, alternating direction.
-
Cook: Grill, pan-fry, or roast at 375°F until internal temp reaches 160°F. Rest 5 min.
What You're Learning
- Temperature control in sausage making: cold = clean grind, warm = smeared fat
- Myosin development: mixing until tacky creates the characteristic sausage "bind"
- Always cook a test patty — professional charcutiers do this every time
- Casing technique: even filling, no air pockets, consistent links
- This is charcuterie at its most accessible — homemade sausage is transformative
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.