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Sausage vs andouille
Posted on 12/28/09 at 4:16 pm
Posted on 12/28/09 at 4:16 pm
What exactly is the difference??
Posted on 12/28/09 at 4:21 pm to Uncle JackD
andouille = chunks of meat/fat
sausage = ground up.
sausage = ground up.
Posted on 12/28/09 at 4:22 pm to Uncle JackD
quote:
Sausage vs andouille
andouille is a type of sausage.
This post was edited on 12/28/09 at 4:23 pm
Posted on 12/28/09 at 4:29 pm to AreJay
As mentioned Andouille is a type of sausage, but its one with what is usually chopped pork, not ground, and its heavily smoked in most cases. Traditionally its in a thicker casing size too from what I have seen.
I have seen a tendency for people to create spicy andouille these days, but I don't think that is how it is traditionally made.
I have seen a tendency for people to create spicy andouille these days, but I don't think that is how it is traditionally made.
Posted on 12/28/09 at 4:45 pm to coloradoBengal
Obviously I love the stuff, I even make the 100 mile round trip to Laplace to buy it from Jacob's because none of the versions from this area measure up. Yes, andouille is a sausage, but the things that set it apart from smoked sausage are more than just the chunk size. It is also the seasoning of garlic and thyme that does it. I prefer it chunky, but I have had some homemade completely ground in the casing that was very good, especially mine.
Posted on 12/28/09 at 4:51 pm to Uncle JackD
As others have said, andouille is a smoked sausage made with lean pork chunks and other seasonings. Jacob's (and other smokehouses in the River Parish area) smoke theirs over pecan wood.
Posted on 12/28/09 at 5:15 pm to Uncle JackD
Alot of people that know there andouille....as stated chunks of meat garlic onion and very slow smoked(about 8 hours) at about 175º....I've seen them use pecan and even sugar cane... it will have a very heavy smoked flavor.
Posted on 12/28/09 at 6:04 pm to tavolatim
I'm going to Maxwell's in Shreveport, 18 miles away to get some south La. andouille they have trucked in, for red beans and rice. If they're sold out I'll use the Italian sausage.
Posted on 12/28/09 at 6:09 pm to Zach
What about a smoked hamhock instead?
don't make red beans very often at all, but a hamhock is great in white beans.
don't make red beans very often at all, but a hamhock is great in white beans.
Posted on 12/28/09 at 7:52 pm to el tigre
quote:
What about a smoked hamhock instead?
i like some pickled pork in mine too
Posted on 12/28/09 at 9:13 pm to el tigre
One of my exes was a Yats girl and always used pickled pork in her red beans...they were great...but I'm still a smoked ham hock man. 

Posted on 12/28/09 at 9:16 pm to tavolatim
is andouille double smoked? in other words is the chunks of pork that go into the caseing smoked, then put in caseing with seasonings then smoked again?
Posted on 12/28/09 at 9:19 pm to Tigerpaw123
No...usually a butt roast or such....the 8 hrs of smoking is more than enough.
Posted on 12/28/09 at 9:22 pm to Tigerpaw123
quote:
is andouille double smoked? in other words is the chunks of pork that go into the caseing smoked, then put in caseing with seasonings then smoked again?
no, it's stuffed unsmoked then they are smoked once in the casing.
Posted on 12/29/09 at 9:42 am to el tigre
quote:
What about a smoked hamhock instead?
don't make red beans very often at all, but a hamhock is great in white beans.
I used to do the hamhock for flavor and the sausage for the real meat, but then someone turned me onto just using smoked ham as both. For red beans... I think its the absolute best.
Posted on 12/29/09 at 10:08 am to coloradoBengal
quote:My best batches are with a good smoked ham hock, some diced ham cooked down in the beans and a good smoked sausage,too. The hock really gives the beans an awesome flavor.
I used to do the hamhock for flavor and the sausage for the real meat, but then someone turned me onto just using smoked ham as both. For red beans... I think its the absolute best.
Posted on 12/29/09 at 10:59 am to Uncle JackD
For me andouille must be pecan-smoked...or at the very least NOT hickory-smoked.
It's smoky but not overly so.
It's smoky but not overly so.
Posted on 12/29/09 at 11:23 am to Uncle JackD
My people are from St. Landry Parish. Growing up for us, andouille was the intestines stuffed into another intestine and then smoked. It resembeled a sausage, but was quite different in taste/texture. It seems that definition over time that has changed. Now it seems to be a larger version of a sausage with coarser ground meat inside the casing.
Posted on 12/29/09 at 11:30 am to FrizzleFry
quote:I think that the andouille we now buy is different from that peoduced in the backyards of St. Landry and Evangaline Parishes 50+ years ago. One of my V.P. buds years ago explained the difference between Andoullie and regular sausage by saying it "had more gut " in it...sounds like your experience...not exactly a Jacobs product. Nothing went to waste,I'm sure.
FrizzleFry
Posted on 12/29/09 at 12:08 pm to OTIS2
You're right Otis, what most people call andouille is quite different than the original version. Nothing went to waste in the older days. thats why some folks like myself grew up eating things like tounge, brains, bouee'(?sp), Paunche (?sp), etc.. (I guess old habits are hard to break, b/c I'm only 35,and I enjoy many of these dishes today. So this isn't something that only happened generations ago)
I think that during the cajun food popluarity explosion, Andouille, was a food that was re-invented as a glorified sausage twist on old-fashioned cajun smoked sausage and sold to the public who wanted to try anything "cajun". Don't get me wrong, I enjoy the product sold as Andouille today, It's just not what I grew up eating as andouille.
I think that during the cajun food popluarity explosion, Andouille, was a food that was re-invented as a glorified sausage twist on old-fashioned cajun smoked sausage and sold to the public who wanted to try anything "cajun". Don't get me wrong, I enjoy the product sold as Andouille today, It's just not what I grew up eating as andouille.

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