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First attempt at homemade boudin & boudin egg rolls
Posted on 9/9/25 at 12:14 pm
Posted on 9/9/25 at 12:14 pm
Wanted to give this a try since getting a sausage stuffer a few months ago, I loosely followed Donald Links recipe. I also used chicken liver, and while the end product is good I will use pork liver on the next round. I'm still on the hunt for a big meat grinder, the one on my Kitchenaid just works ok, so I put all the meat into a bowl and ran it in the Kitchenaid mixer for a while with a paddle and it ends up like finely shredded pork.
Also, my favorite thing at Kartchners is their maple syrup egg rolls, so saved some off to the side, mixed in a little syrup and some brown sugar, frozen them up and fried a few and they're pretty damn good.
Also, my favorite thing at Kartchners is their maple syrup egg rolls, so saved some off to the side, mixed in a little syrup and some brown sugar, frozen them up and fried a few and they're pretty damn good.
This post was edited on 9/9/25 at 2:34 pm
Posted on 9/9/25 at 12:23 pm to YOURADHERE
The pictures look great.
Posted on 9/9/25 at 12:24 pm to YOURADHERE
Bro, you are the man. Those look Fa nom inal
Posted on 9/9/25 at 12:35 pm to Sunnyvale
That looks really good. I would volunteer for taste testing. 
Posted on 9/9/25 at 12:39 pm to YOURADHERE
Looks great. You can chop all everything up with a knife instead of grinding. I kinda prefer that texture when I've done it that way, though it's a bit more work.
Posted on 9/9/25 at 12:48 pm to YOURADHERE
I’d never talk to family again for those egg rolls. Got damn baw
This post was edited on 9/9/25 at 12:49 pm
Posted on 9/9/25 at 2:27 pm to YOURADHERE
gosh dang that looks awesome
Posted on 9/9/25 at 2:53 pm to YOURADHERE
I've gotten to where I'll make eggrolls with just about anything. Take any leftovers and chop them up, wrap them in eggroll wrappers and fry. Better than the original dinner almost every time. 
Posted on 9/9/25 at 3:39 pm to YOURADHERE
Post your address. We all comin over
Posted on 9/9/25 at 3:46 pm to YOURADHERE
quote:Wanna up that recipe a notch????? Take your pork and cut it into fist size pieces or smaller, season following your recipe, then brown the crap out of your meat, deglaze it like you were making a gravy, add your vegetables and brown them down, THEN boil your meat and veggies and then follow your recipe going forward.
I loosely followed Donald Links recipe
Posted on 9/9/25 at 3:56 pm to YOURADHERE
looks very good
only thing about boudin is it's time consuming, but definitely worth it
only thing about boudin is it's time consuming, but definitely worth it
Posted on 9/9/25 at 4:05 pm to Boston911
I almost did that and saw it recommended here(perhaps by you maybe) on here when doing research, but was running a little bit tight on time so just went straight to the braise. My original intention was to partially smoke my pork before braising, but again, didn't have the time. I did however throw the bone with some bits of meat on it on the smoker for a few hours and threw that in the pot while braising and found it gave a little bit of a smokey flavor.
What are yall doing with the leftover boudin juice? It's basically a pork stock, I thought about cheeseclothing it and saving/freezing it but it was insanely spicy but would probably be good in a jambalaya, maybe use with gumbo.
What are yall doing with the leftover boudin juice? It's basically a pork stock, I thought about cheeseclothing it and saving/freezing it but it was insanely spicy but would probably be good in a jambalaya, maybe use with gumbo.
Posted on 9/9/25 at 4:07 pm to YOURADHERE
I actually prefer the shredded pork! I have a butt in my freezer that I plan to make boudin out of when I get a free Saturday. I probably won’t put any in casings. Just boudin balls and egg rolls.
Posted on 9/9/25 at 6:18 pm to YOURADHERE
Looks great YourAd. Making boudin is a little time consuming but not hard. That shite’s like $7.50/lb now at Dons. I’d rather make my own than pay that.
Posted on 9/10/25 at 9:02 am to YOURADHERE
Quite a bit of it gets used in the boudin, but that’s a good idea for any remaining
Posted on 9/10/25 at 9:14 am to YOURADHERE
I make boudin all the time and rarely use the meat grinder that i own.
Rough chop/shred with cleever works great.
Also, I have a large food proccessor that does a great job shredding and cuts the time down tremendously when I'm feeling lazy
Rough chop/shred with cleever works great.
Also, I have a large food proccessor that does a great job shredding and cuts the time down tremendously when I'm feeling lazy
This post was edited on 9/10/25 at 9:17 am
Posted on 9/10/25 at 9:56 am to Boston911
I ended up dumping it but may save it next time to try that out, I had a pretty good bit left, probably close to a gallon.
Posted on 9/10/25 at 11:28 am to YOURADHERE
quote:
What are yall doing with the leftover boudin juice?
Most of the seasoned stock goes back into the mixture of rice/meat/green onions to make the boudin moist. When smoking boudin, it tends to dry out so I make mine moist.
Also, I use the boudin stock to boil my rice instead of plain water. Everything gets used in the Cajun kitchen
quote:
I thought about cheeseclothing it and saving/freezing it but it was insanely spicy but would probably be good in a jambalaya, maybe use with gumbo.
All those leftover chunks of meat, cooked vegetables, and debris have flavor. If I have any leftover stock, I usually puree' it with a hand emersion blender and freeze it in 1.5 cup sizes. It can be re-used for a gravy with other meats: roast, meatball stew, cooking rice (see above), pork roast, ox tail, tongue, smothered onions cooked down in the brown gravy, etc ...
This post was edited on 9/10/25 at 11:38 am
Posted on 9/11/25 at 2:45 am to Got Blaze
quote:
Also, I use the boudin stock to boil my rice instead of plain water. Everything gets used in the Cajun kitchen
I was coming to post the same thing. I use some of the boudin stock too and it gives the rice a real good flavor over boiling in plain water.
What stock I have left after making my boudin goes in my freezer to use in gumbos, stews, etc.
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