This is the
first review of sausages from the recent trip to beautiful downtown Ely, and
their fascinating farmers’ market. It
was “supposed” to be the second, but I’ve had to promote it, for reasons that
you can read about next week. So, the
stall is Grasmere Farm, and it’s an automatic draw for the sausage fan – oodles
of bangers on display in their chilled cabinet, and a pleasant styling of
banners – and there are lots of lovely sausage slices for you to sample.
And then
there’s Doug! You will probably speak to
Doug Shaw (lucky number 21, star sign Sagittarius), the genial and welcoming
chap in the white overall. Doug’s a
super-friendly chap who will rabbit on about Grasmere’s products until the cows
come home. This well-informed young man
told me that the pork is reared on their own farm, which accounts for the
delightful flavour. The people coming up
to the stall while I was there probably tell you more than I could make up –
all were incredibly enthusiastic about these bangers, and were definitely on
return visits....and one lady of a certain age had travelled from Yorkshire
especially for the sausages. If that’s
not a huge endorsement then I don’t know what is. So....Doug and Mrs Doug were lovely. The customers were rich in praise. And the stall looked great. Could the sausages live up to
expectations? Read on, dear heart....
Meat
Content:
65% as
stated on the label. That’s an
acceptable figure, if slightly on the low side for an artisan sausage. The combination of 65% pork and 73% stilton
is wonderful, they certainly seem to pack more inside the skin than seems
possible. The feeling in the mouth
certainly suggests more than 65% pig, but who am I to disagree? The pork is raised on the farm, and the taste
definitely reflects that. Porky,
cheesey, and yummy! My dilemma now is –
next time I visit Grasmere Farm’s stall, do I have more of these winners, or
try something different? What do you
think?
Flavour:
Oh
wow! So super-flavoursome! The stilton is slightly dominant here but the
pork doesn’t roll over and surrender – why would it? Quality ingredients are obviously present,
and if you like cheese and you like sausages, well, you just have to sample Grasmere’s
Pork and Stilton’s for yourself. This
is a partnership that bumps shoulders but gets along perfectly well in the long
term, think George & Mildred rather than Hilda and Stan Ogden. A few weeks ago I grudgingly praised Tesco
and their Pork and Red Leicester sausages – the first time I’d tried the
pork/cheese combo. Well, these beauties
knock the socks off of those, the cheesiness is voluptuous and velvety, and a
perfect companion for the pork.
Texture:
Knobbly,
gnarly, ‘normous. These are big, scary
looking sausages, and each one is different – we like a lot! The filling is relatively fine cut, but
crumbles apart nicely when your knife tells it to. To tell you a secret – I cut one of them in
half and the two sides were probably the same size, each, as many bangers we’ve
reviewed over the years. Mahoosive! I then cut each of the halves into four
pieces, each of which was still a large mouthful of meaty deliciousness. Big logs of cheesy-sausagey heaven. You have to try these gorgeous monsters for
yourself, don’t just take my word for it.
I dare you to try to eat more than two in one sitting – I couldn’t.....
Shrinkage:
Average
weight uncooked - 95g
Average
weight cooked - 74g
Shrinkage -
22%
A
reasonable figure, I suppose, but LOOK how lumpy these bangers are! 95 grams each, wowzer, that’s edging up
towards Ecky Thump territory!
Value For
Money:
£2.84 for
four sausages, weighing 379g - this works out as a price of £7.50 per kg, or 71p
per snorker. I can only rate these
fantastic sausages as FANTASTIC value for money!
Opening
Hours:
Well, Ely
Farmers’ Market is held on the second and fourth Saturday of every month. So if you deffo want to try Grasmere’s
sausages, make your plans and head to Ely.
It’s a lovely place, and if you go by train you can walk right through
the cathedral grounds on your way into the city centre. I “think” the market starts at half past
eight and runs until about two. Visit!
The Next
Day Cold Sausage Test:
I couldn’t
eat the four bangers that I purchased all in one go. One of the extra two was grazed through the
day every time I passed the fridge. The
final one – yes, the picture shows ONE of these humungous bangers sliced up –
was saved for the important “next day, cold” test. Sauces used were; mayo, HP Sauce, Tomato
ketchup, Wholegrain mustard, Reggae Reggae sauce, English mustard, and “nekkid”. Which do you think will be the best combo –
before you read on? The results were:
Mayo: Bit of an odd combination. Second time round, still dubious. Without the quality of the banger, maybe even
a bit sickly.
HP
Sauce: Sweet porkacheesiness, super
tangy sauce, fab. Second lap – the sauce gradually disappears, leaving you to
enjoy the sausage. Impressive!
Red sauce:
MMMMM! Cheese and tomato with a side
helping of delicious pork – a match made in sausagey heaven! Again, the sauce slowly makes way for the
meat, and the stilton is really encouraged tonsay “Hello”, The winner!
Wholegrain
Mustard: OK, but kinda subdues for some
reason. “Pleasant”. “Mostly harmless”....spot the quote?
Reggae
Reggae: Yowser! Reggae Reggae is a very in-your-face sauce,
and takes over completely. Just too powerful for this sausage.
English
mustard: One slice dived in headlong,
the full Tom Daley! Ouch! Too spicy, you impatient devil. Ouch and double ouch......too hot!
Nekkid: Good lord, it’s a triumph of a sausage cold
as well as hot. Yum! Solid, meaty, but cold the sausage seems to
be lacking ever so slightly without a saucey companion. A close second to the Red Sauce.
2 comments:
Ketchup (not Heinz.....yukk) can't beat it!
Hmmm, I like stilton, but don't think I'd like it in my sausage.
Really funny post.
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