The final
slot in any talent contest is often seen as the prime placement, as the act is
fresh in the minds of the judges and voters.
In the Eurovision Song Contest, 48% of the winning acts have performed
last. So the final installment of our
Bury St Edmunds odyssey could well be the best banger, yes? Maybe.
The final
Bury banger is a dreaded Supermarket Special, and you probably know our opinion
of these usually bloody awful specimens already. Ninety-nine out of a hundred supermarket
sausages are terrible, and we’re not afraid of saying so....equally, when one
of their offerings bucks the trend and turns out to be half decent we (uncomfortably)
tell you that too – prime example of this being our shock appreciative review
of a Tesco sausage last year Pork & Red Leicester
So the
final slot is a positive, being a supermarket product is a negative, which way
will the Rate My Sausage verdict fall for Waitrose’s Gourmet Pork Sausage? Well, for a start I thought that lumbering
the damned things with the label “gourmet” was loading an unfair extra load of
expectation on them before they even saw the kitchen! The shop in Bury St Edmunds was as you’d
expect a Waitrose to be, selling the same produce that you find in all the
other main players in the supermarket realm, but for twice the price. I was expecting to pay quite a high price for
their sausages, so imagine my surprise when I spotted these bangers at a
special offer price which was £2 per kilogram less than usual. That must surely help their chances....let’s
find out....
Meat
Content:
84% and you
can tell. The meat is good quality, no
odd looking or tasting bits that we could find (mind you, we like a bit of
gristle now and then). Pork is the
dominant force, which is a good thing, and I noted the meat content as “quite
good”. I was quite impressed, as was my
Junior Sidekick, who was unusually taking part in the review when the bangers
were hot out of the pan. Talking of the
hot pan, the fat that seeped out of these sausages was very dirty, very black
and completely nasty looking! Better out
than in though, I suppose.
Flavour:
Herbs are
in abundance and mix in rather well with the pork – this is a good
combination. Each flavour holds its own
but gels very well to make these sausages tasty and pleasant to eat. I doubt very much that they’re made in-house
though, although the chap who served me was politeness incarnate, and we had quite
a good natter about meat, Christmas and prejudice (!) rather to the barely
concealed disapproval of his colleagues!
I found their attitude distasteful, the guy was interacting brilliantly
with a customer, and providing exactly the enjoyable experience that the
supermarket giants boast so loudly about but fail to provide almost without
exception. Tut tut, butchery counter
dudes!
Texture:
Dry-ish,
firm and fluffy, quite an unusual texture but we both enjoyed it. Being a supermarket banger, this texture has
probably been designed by committee or computer, but they’ve done a good enough
job. There’s that squeak when you eat
them – positive – but they’re not coarse enough for our liking – negative – but
overall this is a jolly good attempt.
Shrinkage:
Average
weight uncooked - 73g
Average
weight cooked - 49g
Shrinkage -
33%
Absolutely
dreadful amount of waste, what a shame.
The supermarket contender has really let itself down here after an
encouraging performance otherwise.
Value For
Money:
£1.74 for
six sausages, weighing 438g - this works out as a price of £3.98 per kg, or 29p
per snorker. That’s the special offer
price, but goodness me, that is cheap!
At this price I have to rate Waitrose Gourmet Pork sausages as really
good value for money – wait until the offer is repeated and try some for
yourself!
Through A
Child’s Eyes:
He liked ‘em! In fact, I am 95% sure he nicked the last
half a sausage from my plate when I wasn’t looking. Denies everything, of course....
The Imaginatively
Titled Next Day Cold Sausage Test:
Terribly
sorry dear reader, but we polished off all six sausages in one sitting. What’s the plural of “mea culpa”?
Opening
Hours:
Waitrose is
a huge multi-national uber-shop intent on world domination, and determined to
separate you from as much of your wonga as they can possibly take. Therefore “open all hours”.
And
Finally, Esther:
Right,
there’s no easy way to say it, we enjoyed these supermarket sausages. There.
More proof that we’re objective?
Not the world’s greatest bangers but nice enough for us to give them the
RMS seal of approval. It’s been a while
since we’ve tested many of the cheaper supermarket bangers so we’re going to be
putting that right, in short order.
First up is a budget banger from a posh supermarket.....but we’ll leave
that hanging there for now....
4 comments:
Pass the gravey!
Wow, really? Waitrose sausages for £2.00? that's surprising. Glad that it was of great quality. You'd have to try these with a red wine bottle and let us know how it goes.
Hello PC, thanks for visiting!
Next time I am off the medication I'll give your suggestion a go, not with Waitrose sausages though....
Like the site but Ethiopians don't do Arabic they do Aramaic, tad different. Jumbo beer in the beer hall in Gondar was fine at the price, 30p a pint. Never saw a sausage but had a really cracking pizza in the guesthouse.
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