SLOVAK SAUSAGES
FROM
ČAKLOV
EASTERN
SLOVAKIA
Two things I always
wanted to know how to make were: home made wine and sausages. I am a firm
believer of learning from someone that knows, than from a book. As the one
that knows will familiarize you only with the important things and you
wont waste time by reading a 300 page book on how to make 4 gallons of
wine, otherwise you may just go to the liquor store and buy it. The same
goes for sausages. Many of our friends are making home wine and home
sausages. I always liked to eat them and drink the wine, but I was never
brave enough to venture into this unknown culinary area. With Lubos Demcak's
help I ventured into both. Late last
October I phoned Lubos to give me little bit of an advice about wine
making. He explained the important things: what to do, what not to do. I
bought 4 gallons of red and 4 gallons of white juice, the wine was not
bad. I am now doing my fourth batch and it's getting better with every new
batch. I can't understand why I didn't ask him earlier.
During this lent Lubos
mentioned that he was going to make some sausages for Easter. I have asked
him if I could participate. So one evening we all got together: Lubos, Maria,
his visiting sister Helenka and his brother Jozef, at Lobos house. We
have pealed and ground at least quart of garlic cloves, Hand ground pork,
some moose and deer, added spices and mix it all well together and than
through the grinder's special attachment we stuffed the mixture into
natural casings. Lubos does have huge smoke house in his back yard, so he
smoked them for few days and we had them Easter Sunday. They are
delicious. So finally after all these years I have learned how to make
sausages. Many thanks Lubos.
Here is the recipe for
sausages from ČAKLOV
20 pounds of meat. You
could use just pork or mixture of pork and beef, or pork, beef and game if
you are a hunter ore have good friends as we have that hunt. 1/2 pound of
table salt, 5 ounces of ground black pepper, 2 ounces of red paprika,
couple of spoons of ground caraway seeds, 2 ounces of hot red paprika if
you want your sausages a bit hot.
Grind the meat in electric or manual meat grinder, not too fine not too
coarse. Mix in all ingredients and let sit for an hour. Untangle the
natural casings and install sausage attachment on your grinder. Start
putting the mixture trough the grinder again, this time without the meat
grinder knife. Slowly fill the casings. After you have filled all the
mixture to casings, twist the sausages in the length you want, put them in
the smoker and smoke for couple of days. The smoked sausages should be
stored in a freezer and cooked well or barbecued prior to eating. They are
delicious.
Many Slovak families
living in the villages still breed pigs for their own consumption. Most of
the pigs are slaughtered in early December. I wasn't too sure about this,
so I have just called Mrs. Lunter, Maria Demcak's Grandmother from Telgart and she told me that the pigs were slaughtered by December 15 and
the next slaughter was during Fasiangy, time after New Year and before
the Lent. After they made the sausages, hurky or jaternice (sorry I don't
know the English word), all of the meat and bacon were smoked. The
procedure with meat was that they put it all in a trough and pored salt
over it. The meat would let out a brine and they would pour it over the
meat for a week or two and then smoke it. In the old days the chimneys on
the houses were rare due to taxation of the chimneys and the attic used to
serve as the smoke house. Later on, when they built chimneys in the houses
they divert the smoke through the attic to smoke the sausages, ham, bacon,
hurky, and meat. Now many people in Telgart have smoke houses in their
back yards and there are still some houses without the chimneys and their
attics are used by different people from the village without smoke houses.
All I can say is that making the sausages is much harder than eating them,
but we never realize it until we venture into making them.
GO
TO EASTER TRADITIONS
GO
TO RECIPE CORNER
Published in the
Slovak Heritage Live newsletter Volume 3, No. 2, Summer 1995
Copyright © Vladimir Linder 1995
3804 Yale
Street, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5C 1P6
The above article may not be copied, reproduced,
republished, or redistributed by any means including electronic, without
the express written permission of Vladimir
Linder. All rights reserved.
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