Showing posts with label farmhouse sausage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farmhouse sausage. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Prior's - West Lynn - Farmhouse Sausage

When I came up with the idea of Rate My Sausage at the end of 2009 the plan was to compare King’s Lynn’s six proper butchers’ sausages with supermarket varieties. Pretty soon I found out that I’d already made my first mistake – Lynn actually has a seventh butcher – Prior’s of West Lynn. I’d assumed that the West Lynn outfit was part of the same group as the Prior’s on Lynn’s Saturday Market Place but I was wrong! There is a connection, but the West Lynn shop is very definitely individual, and the boss, Chris Prior, joked that maybe he should change the name to Chris’ Quality Meats to avoid confusion. Judging by the groans and raised eyebrows of the boys chopping up the meat, this won’t be happening anytime soon.


One thing I was “privy” to (the word is not chosen at random) was the smokehouse. Chris led me through the maze of rooms and prep areas and out into a small yard, which contained what looked like a tiny garden shed, or an outside loo. “The smokehouse must be round the side of that” I thought. I was wrong. It WAS the smokehouse (see pic near the bottom of the review). So I’ll call it quaint. The smell drifting out was absolutely mouth-watering though, and it’s no surprise that the bacon sides that are hung on that metal rail are gifted with such a rich flavour and aroma.




There’s a website for your perusal, just click here: http://www.priorsofwestlynn.co.uk/


What a hidden gem of a place! As well as meat you can find exceptional quality deli produce, a cheese-a-holic’s delight, pie-muncher’s perfection. Please click on the picture at the end of this refiew of their fabulous range of packs of meats, which are simply wonderful value for money, considering the quality of the produce. You can drive here if you want to, but I’d recommend using the Lynn Ferry service for an added element of fun when you visit – the shop is just around the corner from where the ferry docks.


Meat Content:
80%. I’ll say right here at the very start of this review, these sausages are good ‘uns, and one reason for that is that the meat is not “perfect”. You can really tell that these are made of chopped up Little Pig Robinson; whether by design or accident, there are plenty of imperfections in the minced pork. We Like That a lot. We rate the meat content as “great”, some sausage fans may not have such robust taste buds....

Flavour:
There’s a lightness to the flavour of these sausages, but that doesn’t equate to bland. Far from it. These are NOT March Quality Meats-style bangers. The pork is allowed to shine through in these rustic bangers, and there’s just a hint of something else there when the meat’s been swallowed. I can’t quite work out what it is, but suffice to say that it’s tasty!


Texture:
Densely packed, feisty, bolshy, no messing with these chaps. When pulled apart you can see the very roughly chopped pork with some fattier pieces – regular readers know we like it like this. There were a few quite large chunks of gristle, probably not to everyone’s liking. Rather exceptionally, these sausages bond together very closely considering the coarseness.


Shrinkage:
Average weight uncooked - 58g
Average weight cooked - 50g

Shrinkage - 13%

Praise the Lord Of The Sausage! A figure not between 23-25% at last. Lower shrinkage means more meat for your money, so well done Prior’s, good work!


Value For Money:
£1.38, for four sausages, weighing 231g - this works out as a price of £5.95 per kg, or 34p per snorker. I rate this as very good value for money, I liked these sausages a lot, and I really like the price.


The Bisto Factor:
Cooked on a miserable, grey morning, the tempting aroma of these sausages found its way out of the kitchen and really perked me up. It may do the same for you, try it!


Tuesday, 4 May 2010

Papworth's Farmhouse Pork Sausage


This week we return to Swaffham market place, and the warm welcome found at Papworth‘s Butchers & Graziers.


Our first visit saw us trying the Papworth‘s Champion pork sausage. Now, I would have thought that with the name “Champion”, this was their best banger. I would have thought wrong. Read on….


Meat Content:
I believe each of these sausages may be the entire leg of a tiny breed of pig, genetically engineered by Papworth’s in a lab somewhere, possibly just off the A1065 Fakenham to Swaffham road in one of the Weasenhams (my money’s on Weasenham All Saints). Superbly meaty, these bangers are deliciously chunky, a carnivore’s delight. Bravo!

Flavour:
Porky. Peppery. Perfect! Every single bite was an absolute joy, and I found myself cutting them smaller so that the meal would last longer. That’s a first for me, as I still have the military mindset of “Eat as fast as you can”. When you buy some, relish every mouthful.



Texture:Would “fabulous“ do them justice? Could I risk a “sumptuous“? Papworth‘s sure know how to make sausages, and these are even better than their Champion Porkers. Sliced into six the slices stood defiantly upright, daring me to “come and have a nibble, if you think you’re hard enough”. So I re-sliced each slice, and they still stood firm. To say that these chaps are “firm” is inadequate. Perfection in a pig-skin.

Shrinkage:Average weight uncooked - 79g
Average weight cooked - 72g

Shrinkage - 9%

Unprecedented single-figure shrinkage. The lowest score of any banger so far, with 12% being the next lowest (Vancouver Butcher’s Pork Sausage and Papworth’s other banger, the Champion Pork). GREAT work Papworth’s.


Value For Money:
£3.05, for 6 sausages weighing 476g - this is a price of £6.58 per kg, or 51p per snorker. 51p is maybe in the top quarter of the table price-wise but you need to ask - “Is this sausage what I is scoffing worth 51p?” For me, it’s a no-brainer, “YES!” Great VFM, buy some right now!