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Siskonmakkara (Sister Sausage). 1001 Greatest Sausage Recipes.



In this video we make Siskonmakkara, the Finnish Sister Sausage. It is used traditionally in a soup dish that I make at then end and really really enjoyed. If you would like to practice making a easy sausage that involves making a emulsification this is a great candidate.

If you’d like to make this for yourself the recipe is in 1001 greatest sausage recipes:

If you’d like the exact sausage stuffer from the video here is the link:

If you feel up to it here is a link to Patreon:

If you would like a copy of Home Production of Quality Meats and Sausage here is a link:

If you guys need a grinder to get you started on your home sausage making journey here is a link:

If you guys are looking for a nice knife set here is a link:

Thanks to the Patrons:
Kate Brios
Ben Johnson
Peter Morrow
Richard Miller
Scott Roeder
Andy Eddings

Happy Sausage Making Everyone.

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46 Comments

  1. Like
    @teeasalo2221 wrote, you usually cook the siskonmakkara directly in the soup without its casing. That's what makes it a little different from other sausages with similar ingredients.

    Just pull bite-sized portions of the sausage from its casing into boiling broth and cook a few minutes. If used immediately, no casing is needed and you can just roll small balls by hand.

  2. Hi MASTER Duncan. I don't know what to say. Just overwhelmed with your recipes and demonstrations on sausages. In fact, I am one of your followers and " hooked" on your platform of demonstrates. Where can I also buy /get these two meat/sausage recipe books????. PLEASE don't ever stop with your recipes and demonstrations. Especially on German sausages /meat products. THANK YOU. PO Box 2601. Fourways. Sandton. Code 2055. South Africa.

  3. Nice video, Duncan. I totally agree that less is more; salt and pepper goes a long way in all cooking, IMHO. Just a comment regarding the name: the correct translation would be sibling sausage, rather than sister dito. In Swedish it is syskonkorv, syskon=sibling and korv=sausage (makkara in Finnish). Possibly the name comes from the linking of the sausage… Keep up the good work and thank you for sharing your knowledge of the craft.

  4. This sausage will taste amazing, the ingredients are similar to Japanese hamburg which I make for my family. I’m going to try this with a curry sauce.👍🏻 Thanks for another great video Duncan 👏🏻👏🏻

  5. I've been collecting your sausage recipes since March '22. Can't follow all because I'm in rural Laos so some ingredients and processes are beyond what's available. Not too fond of smoked goods so prefer fresh sausage. BTW sounds like you're throat is suffering on this vid.

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