Have you
ever heard of a place called Theydon Bois (rhymes with “choice”)? No, neither had Junior Sidekick and I until
very recently. It’s a village in Essex,
just south of Epping, and it’s where we found ourselves parking to catch a
train into the Olympic Games. Our
cunning plan had been to drive to Epping, park, and ride, but we hadn’t
imagined that so many others would have the same idea, resulting in the large
car park being full by quarter to eight, doh!
I’d made a Plan B, natch, which involved driving to each station
successively closer to London, and we got lucky at the very next stop, Theydon
Bois. We parked on the edge of the
enormous village green and had a thoroughly fabulous day at the Olympic park.
It was a
happy accident that when we returned after the athletics we walked right past J
Phillips the butcher, and just had to try their sausages – once again Rate My Sausage
puts itself through tough times on behalf of its readers...we bought some of
their regular Pork Sausages but first under the microscope and into the frying
pan are J Phillips’ Old English Sausages.....
Meat
Content:
I didn’t
note the percentage dammit - once again it’s an EPIC FAIL! Sorry.
But don’t worry, there’s an abundance of porkiness going on. First impression was “OMG that is niiiiice!”,
immediately followed by the notion that my cutlery may not be manly enough to
deal with these chunky, loggy, meaty monsters. Do I have a chainsaw lurking in the toolbox? Of course I don’t, and that was somewhat an exaggeration,
but if you’re looking for a muscular accompaniment for your mash then these
would be perfect.
Flavour:
Woody,
slightly spicy, super herby, all subtly mixed together resulting in a
deliciously more-ish, very hearty sausage.
Seasoned just right, there is a battery of herbs taking turns to tickle
your taste buds, sagey for sure, backed up with (I think) thyme, rosemary
and....not 100% confident but I’ll go for marjoram? If these sausages were a nineties garage
group they’d be So Solid – and it takes Twenty One Seconds To Chew.
Texture:
Very, very
solid, splendidly so. Uncompromisingly
dense and firm, the butcher seems to have squeezed more fantastic filling
inside the snappy skins than seems possible.
You can see in the uncooked photo that they are packed with good-size
chunks of ingredient, and in the sliced picture the variety and nicely random
distribution of those ingredients. All
kept succulent by the melted fat. Such a
good texture to these sausages, and we like them, a lot.
Shrinkage:
Average
weight uncooked - 83g
Average
weight cooked - 58g
Shrinkage -
31%
A bit
disappointing, but this is the only negative aspect of an otherwise great
banger. It’s just this stat that has
stopped them from barging into this year’s top four.
Value For
Money:
£3.13 for
five sausages, weighing 417g - this works out as a price of £7.48 per kg, or 63p
per snorker. That’s not cheap, but these
have the feel of good quality. Having
pondered this one long and hard, we rate these sausages as Very Good value for
money. Good work dudes!
The Bisto
Factor:
Oh Cruel
Goddess of Frying Sausages, why do you torture me thus? Phillips’ Old English sausages had my mouth
watering long before they saw the plate.
The aroma matched the flavour – herby, meaty, delicious.
And
Finally, Esther:
I doubt
that Junior Sidekick and I will ever visit Theydon Bois again, but it was
lovely to reach into a new area to try the local hand-crafted sausages. Mr Phillips can be rightly proud of his Old
English bangers, and the village inhabitants can consider themselves very
fortunate to have brilliant sausages available on their doorsteps. And it was all because of the
Olympics....cosmic karma.
1 comment:
What about a sausage olympics? You could have the toad-in-the-hole vault and the fryathlon?
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