Venison Summer Sausage Recipe - Old School Style Summer Sausage (2024)

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5 from 9 votes

By Hank Shaw

October 11, 2021

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Venison summer sausage comes in many forms, from the faux fermented versions you see from many butchers, to this real-deal, old school version that hails from Holland.

Venison Summer Sausage Recipe - Old School Style Summer Sausage (2)

This venison summer sausage is called boerenmetworst, literally “farmer’s dry sausage,” and it is a proper summer sausage from the Old Country. You make the links, let them ferment for a few days, then smoke them very gently—you don’t want them to cook. Then you hang them to dry for a few weeks before eating.

Note that this summer sausage is fully cured, like salami. If you want to make it more like the modern versions, let the links hang for only two or three weeks, so they are still a little soft.

There is a distinctive flavor to Dutch (and Afrikaner) sausages that comes from the liberal use of coriander, ginger, cloves and black pepper. Allspice is another common addition, and if you want to add some, you can mix in a ½ teaspoon.

These are the main flavors you will get in most venison summer sausage you would get from the processor, too, which is why I use them.

Getting Started

No matter what summer sausage recipe you use, you will need some equipment. First and foremost, a smoker. Summer sausage is smoked, period. If you don’t have a smoker, and you really, really want to make summer sausage, you can cheat by using smoked salt. It’s not the same, but it will get you close. Ish.

You will obviously also need a meat grinder and a sausage stuffer, plus casings. My go-to source for all of these are my friends at The Sausage Maker, a family owned outfit out of Buffalo, New York. Great products at a good price.

Typical Midwestern venison summer sausage is stuffed into quasi-edible collagen casings, which I don’t like. Feel free to use them if you do. I prefer natural casings, either beef middles or really wide hog casings. The Sausage Maker sells 38-42 mm wide hog casings that work very well.

You will also need a set up to ferment and to dry your summer sausage. This can be as simple as a plastic sheet draped over a clothes drying rack, which I use often, and then a cool garage or basem*nt. I’ll get into the details of both steps in a bit. But know that you need these to make a proper venison summer sausage… or any dry cured sausage, for that matter.

Venison Summer Sausage Recipe - Old School Style Summer Sausage (3)

Starters and Cures

You will need both. Cures are various formulations of salt mixed with sodium nitrite or sodium nitrate. These are there for a variety of reasons, but mostly for food safety. Nitrite prevents botulism and other bacterial nasties. It is vital to use it.

And all those stupid “uncured” products you see in the market are lying to you: They are plenty cured, using celery extract, which is… sodium nitrite. This is not the place to debate their use, but suffice to say you need it. If that’s a stopper for you, this is not the recipe for you.

You need Instacure no. 2 for this recipe, which is salt + sodium nitrate. This allows you to hang dry your venison summer sausage for weeks. The no. 1 cure is for smoked products that are not hung to dry for more than a week or so, if at all.

The starter is an insurance policy against bacterial disaster. Basically all dry cured sausage, including summer sausage, is fermented. That’s the tang you taste. Various cultures prefer different levels of tang, and in this case we do want some acidity, so we use either the F-LC or FRM-52 starter culture, which gives you a more Northern European style sausage.

You will notice that I use more than what is called for on the package. That is intentional, and it’s for your safety. When making dry cured sausages at home, unless you are an expert, you will want to overdo it a little on the cure to ensure that every bit of your summer sausage gets some.

The starters introduce good bacteria into your links that help them ferment correctly. I have done batches without starters, and they have worked, but not all of them. You’ll know if they don’t, because the sausages will stink. Use the starter.

Summer Sausage Tips

These apply to most dry cured sausages, not just venison summer sausage.

Cut your meat and fat — it has to be either pork fat or fat trimmed off beef roasts or steaks — into chunks that fit into your grinder, add the salt, and the curing salt, toss well, and let this sit, covered, in your fridge for up to 2 days. One day is ideal, and even 6 hours will do.This helps develop myosin, which will give you a tighter bind when you stuff the links later.

Cold is key. Everything you work with needs to be cold as you make the sausages. Once made, they can handle warmer temperatures.

And by cold I mean so cold your hands hurt when working with the mixture, which is around 30°F or so. You want all your liquids to be cold, too. Yes, even the vinegar. Side note: Don’t overdo it on the vinegar here, because its acidity can break your bind in your sausage and turn it crumbly.

Chill your equipment and bowls and meat in the freezer for an hour or so. And when I say equipment, I just mean the business end, so blades, auger and meat tray. Not the motor.

Grind is up to you. I prefer my venison summer sausage finely ground, through a 4.5 mm die. But you can get away with a 6 mm die, too. Grind twice, first through a very coarse die, then a finer one. This helps you strip away any stray silverskin that might get stick in the gears.

(Here are all my dry cured sausage and salami recipes.)

The mixing stage needs to be cold, too. This is where you mix the ground meat and spices with the liquids and the starter. This is important because if your mix is warm here, you can get what is called smear, where the fat partially melts and coats the meat bits, shortening the myosin strands within — this is exactly the process in making shortbread, where the fat shortens the gluten in those cookies.

Venison Summer Sausage Recipe - Old School Style Summer Sausage (5)

Stuffing Venison Summer Sausage

You never want to use your grinder as a sausage stuffer. I know, the manufacturers say it’s OK. It’s not. Running meat through the auger after it’s been mixed can and does damage or even destroy the bind you just made. You need a sausage stuffer.

Stuff links loosely at first.For a venison summer sausage, you want long links —you’ll tie the ends together eventually. Cut out lengths of casing about 2 feet long, Stuff a little more than 1 foot’s worth, with plenty of extra casing on either side. Do this with all the sausage before moving on.

When you’re ready, gently compress the long links to fill the casing. Keep an eye out for air pockets. Use a sterile needle or sausage pricker (set it aglow in your stovetop flame) to puncture the casing over all the air pockets. Gently compress the links together to squeeze out the air pockets; this takes practice. Tie the ends of the casing together in a double or triple knot.

Fermenting Summer Sausage

Hang the links from a clothes rack or somesuch. I use “S” rings you buy from the hardware store to hang them from the clothes rack rods. Now you need to ferment your links, keeping them warm and moist.

I do this by putting a humidifier under the hanging sausages and then tenting the whole shebang with big garbage bags that I’ve sliced open on one end. I also use a watersprayer to spritz my sausages a couple times a day. Doing this prevents the casings from hardening. Keep your sausages hanging at room temperature (65 to 80°F) at about 85 percent humidity for three days.

Yes, three days at room temperature. This is why you need the curing salts and the starter culture. It will be fine. You can go up to five days here, or as little as two. Three is best in my opinion.

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Smoking and Drying

Move your venison summer sausage to your smoker and smoke them over very low heat for up to 4 hours of continuous smoke. It is vitally important that you do not cook your links here, so put ice in the water tray of the smoker and smoke on a cold day or in the early morning. Don’t let the smoker rise above 100°F at all. If it gets too hot, open the door of the smoker or just take the links out.

If you can cold smoke, do that for up to a day.

(Note that typical Midwestern style venison summer sausage is hot smoked to cook. If you want that — it makes a sausage that goes bad quickly, but it might be closer to what you are familiar with — use Instacure no. 1 and smoke until cooked to an internal temperature of 155°F.)

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Now you need to dry your sausages and turn them into summer sausage. Hang them in a place that is about 50°F to 60°F with about 80 to 90 percent humidity. In most cases you will need to put a humidifier under your links. I also spritz them with water once a day for the first 2 weeks.

After the first week of hanging, drop the humidity to 70 to 80 percent.

OK, for a typical Midwestern style venison summer sausage, you can stop here. Your links will still be kinda soft, but definitely tangy and half-dried. But if you want to go old school, and you can with this recipe, and make real boerenmetworst,keep going.

On the third week drop your humidity again to 65 to 70 percent and hold it there until a total of 4 to 8 weeks has elapsed since the sausage went into the chamber.

You now have boerenmetworst. To store long-term, vacuum seal them individually and keep in the fridge. They will last indefinitely this way, and the vacuum sealing will keep them from becoming rock hard. You can also freeze them until the Second Coming.

5 from 9 votes

Venison Summer Sausage

This is an old school variety of summer sausage that is fully cured. Many modern versions are not, and must be refrigerated or they will spoil quickly. This is more like a salami; if you want that softer summer sausage texture, hang for less time.

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Course: Cured Meat, Snack

Cuisine: American, German

Servings: 25 servings

Author: Hank Shaw

Prep Time: 3 hours hours

Cook Time: 0 minutes minutes

Smoking Time: 4 hours hours

Total Time: 7 hours hours

Ingredients

  • 3 ½ pounds venison
  • 1 pound fatty pork shoulder
  • ½ pound pork fatback
  • 51 grams salt
  • 6 grams Instacure No. 2
  • 10 grams dextrose, or granulated sugar if you can’t get it
  • 1 tablespoon cracked black pepper
  • 1 tablespoon coarsely ground coriander seed
  • 2 teaspoons coarsely ground mustard seed
  • 1 teaspoon powdered ginger
  • ½ teaspoon ground cloves
  • ¼ cup malt vinegar
  • 1/2 cup distilled water
  • 10 grams F-LC or FRM-52 starter culture
  • Hog casings preferably 38-42 mm wide casings

Instructions

  • Cut the meat and fat into chunks that will fit into your grinder. Trim as much sinew and silverskin as you can. Put the fat into a container in the fridge. Mix the dextrose, salt and curing salt with the meats and put it in the fridge overnight. This helps develop myosin, which will give you a tighter bind when you stuff the links later.

  • The next day, put your grinding equipment — blade, coarse and fine die, etc. — in the freezer. Mix the ginger, cloves and half of the remaining spices with the meat and fat. Put the mixture into the freezer and let everything chill down until it hits about 30°F or so. It won’t freeze solid because of the salt. Normally, this takes about 90 minutes. While you’re waiting, soak about 15 feet of hog casings in a bowl of warm water, and put the malt vinegar in the fridge.

  • When the meat and fat are cold, take them out and grind through the coarse die of the grinder; I use a 10 mm plate. Test the temperature of the mixture, and if it’s 35°F or colder, go ahead and grind it all again through a fine die, like a 4.5 mm. If it’s warmer than 35°F, put the mix back in the freezer to chill. This might take an hour or so if you’ve let the meat warm up too much. Use the time to clean up, and to dissolve your starter culture in the distilled water.

  • Once the sausage has been ground twice, test the temperature again to make sure it’s 35°F or colder. I prefer to chill the mix down to 28°F to32°F for this next stage. Chill the mix and when it’s cold enough, take it out and add the remaining spices, the vinegar and the water-starter culture mixture. Now, mix and knead this all up in a big bin or bowl with your (very clean) hands for a solid 2 minutes—your hands will ache with cold, which is good. You want everything to almost emulsify.

  • Stuff the sausage into hog casings rather loosely. For this sausage, you want long links. First cut lengths of casing about 2 feet long. Stuff each with a little more than 1 foot's worth of sausage, leaving with plenty of extra casing on either side. Do this with all the sausage before moving on.

  • When you’re ready, gently compress the long links. Keep an eye out for air pockets. Use a sterile needle or sausage pricker (set it aglow in your stovetop flame) to puncture the casing over all the air pockets. Gently compress the links together to squeeze out the air pockets; this takes practice. Tie the ends of the casing together in a double or triple knot.

  • Hang the links from a clothes rack or somesuch. I use “S” rings you buy from the hardware store to hang them from the clothes rack rods. Now you need to ferment your links, keeping them warm and moist. I do this by putting a humidifier under the hanging sausages and then tenting the whole shebang with big garbage bags that I’ve sliced open on one end. I also use a watersprayer to spritz my sausages a couple times a day. Doing this prevents the casings from hardening. Keep your sausages hanging at room temperature (65 to 80°F) at about 85 percent humidity for three days.

  • Move the sausages to your smoker and smoke them over very low heat for up to 4 hours of continuous smoke. It is vitally important that you do not cook your links here, so put ice in the water tray of the smoker and smoke on a cold day or in the early morning. Don’t let the smoker rise above 100°F at all. If it gets too hot, open the door of the smoker or just take the links out.

  • Now you need to dry your sausages and turn them into salami. Hang them in a place that is about 50°F to 60°F with about 80 to 90 percent humidity. In most cases you will need to put a humidifier under your links. I also spritz them with water once a day for the first 2 weeks. After the first week of hanging, drop the humidity to 70 to 80 percent. On the third week drop it again to 65 to 70 percent and hold it there until a total of 4 to 8 weeks has elapsed since the salami went into the chamber.

  • You now have boerenmetworst. To store long-term, vacuum seal them individually and keep in the fridge. They will last indefinitely this way, and the vacuum sealing will keep them from becoming rock hard. You can also freeze them.

Notes

I generally make 1/2 pound to 1 pound sausages in this recipe, so you'll get somewhere between 5 and 10 links. Shoot for links about 1 foot long, more or less.

Keys to Success

  • Obviously to do this right you'll need a smoker and a place to ferment the links, and a place to hang them afterwards. Have all this ready before you begin. Tips on each of these are in the headnotes.
  • Do not mess with the amounts of salt, cure or starter. Yes, I use more starter than strictly needed. I do this to ensure that you get enough in the sausage, so the good bacteria will defeat the bad bacteria. It is a food safety measure.
  • You really do want the links kinda sweaty those first couple days. Not hot, but moist. This helps fermentation and prevents the links from drying out too soon.
  • If you hang these sausages for only 3 to 4 weeks, you will get a consistency a little closer to the modern summer sausage. I don't love this, so I cure fully. It's a personal choice.
  • The spices give you a very Dutch or German style sausage. You can vary things to get a different effect, or leave some of the spices out if you happen to have an aversion to one or another.

Nutrition

Calories: 168kcal | Carbohydrates: 1g | Protein: 17g | Fat: 10g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 5g | Cholesterol: 67mg | Sodium: 833mg | Potassium: 254mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 8IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 8mg | Iron: 2mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe? Tag me today!Mention @huntgathercook or tag #hankshaw!

Categorized as:
American Recipes, Appetizers and Snacks, Charcuterie, Featured, How-To (DIY stuff), Recipe, Venison, Wild Game

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

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Venison Summer Sausage Recipe - Old School Style Summer Sausage (2024)

FAQs

What is the ratio of venison to pork for summer sausage? ›

Using a ratio of 75% game meat to 25% pork trimmings will give the game meat some pork flavor and bind it when cooking, without removing the venison taste.

What temperature should deer summer sausage be? ›

Place the sausage in the smoker to hang, leaving plenty of room for airflow, to ferment for 2-4 hours. Add a water pan for humidity. 160 degrees until the internal temperature of the sausage reaches 150 degrees. Remove the sausage from the smoker and rinse with cold water.

How long do you let summer sausage sit before cooking? ›

Let the sausage rest overnight in your fridge so the flavors can mingle. The next day, you'll want to cook in either the oven or smoker. For an oven finish, preheat the oven to 185°F.

Is venison summer sausage fully cooked? ›

It's fully cooked and ready to eat. Venison and beef. Approx 1 lb stick.

Does venison summer sausage need to be cooked? ›

You can also fry it up or toss it in a casserole, but the real beauty of summer sausage is that it's simple, ready-to-eat, and tastes great at room temperature.

What is the best cut of meat for summer sausage? ›

Chuck is a common beef cut for sausage making and comes from the cows neck, shoulder, and parts of the ribs. At 15-20% fat, it as a relatively high fat content for beef. A combination of Brisket (point end) and Chuck is a good combination.

What fat to add to venison sausage? ›

Pork fat is usually added to the venison meat to add fat. You can get pork trimmings from your local butcher. I like to make 60/40 venison sausage, which means you mix 60% venison with 40% pork fat trimmings. Cube the venison and pork trimming to a size that you can feed into your grinder.

Is venison summer sausage shelf stable? ›

Also, traditional summer sausage is often fermented to achieve the desired drop in pH which necessitates a longer processing schedule. However, venison summer sausage can be produced as a fully cooked, not shelf-stable product.

How do you know when summer sausage is done? ›

Bake in oven for 3 to 5 hours until the center of the sausage reaches 145° F. For a drier sausage or a sausage with a more cooked flavor, continue cooking until the center temperature is 155° F or higher.

Can you overcook summer sausage? ›

It will take you an average of anything between 20–25 minutes, which is not a relatively long cooking time. Overcooking or overheating the sausage past 160 °F will make the fat in the meat melt and evaporate, leaving the sausage less juicy or dry.

How long to cook summer sausage at 250 degrees? ›

SAUSAGE HEATING INSTRUCTIONS

Maintain a cooking temperature of 200-250°F, and turn sausage several times to ensure even smoking. Heat the Fully Smoked sausage 30-45 minutes until 165°F. Smoke the Fresh (Raw) sausage for 1½ -2 hours until 165°F.

Do you poke holes in summer sausage before cooking? ›

No poking or prodding

Good Food notes that if you're concerned about your sausages splitting or exploding, it's important to cook them over a low heat. They also suggest that you let sausages rest a bit before slicing into them, just as you would a steak.

Can you eat summer sausage right away? ›

Some Southerners like to make post-holiday sandwiches with summer sausage, or even chop it up and throw it into a casserole. Luckily, there's no bad way to enjoy it since it's ready-to-eat at room temperature!

Why is my summer sausage mushy? ›

The first thing people will tell you about sausage without a firm texture is that the mixture initially contained too much moisture. This could possibly be true, but there are a few other things you may consider also. The air speed of sausage drying should not be higher than 2 mph.

Is venison summer sausage healthy? ›

Venison is packed with protein, vitamins and minerals. Better yet, it's a meat free of antibiotics and synthetic hormones, and it happens to be the satisfying result of a hunter's time afield.

What meat is good for summer sausage? ›

Sausages will be moister and hold together better if there is some fat in the meat. Regular-grind beef, lamb, pork and chicken work well. Venison and turkey might need a little pork or beef fat added. Mixing leaner meats with ground pork will make a leaner product.

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