Traditionally eaten at braais or barbecues, boerewors (Afrikaans: farmer's sausage) are thick, hearty and flavoursome Afrikaner sausages, often eaten with a corn porridge called pap. There is no one definitive recipe for boerewors, as nearly every family has its own variation. Some other recipes use bacon and springbok meat. This version uses a sausage maker, and makes about 6 lb of sausage.
Total Time
Cooking: 2 hours Resting: >26 hours
Servings
12
Cook Time
2 hours
1 tbsp coriander seed
2 lb beef, cubed
2 lb mutton, cubed
2 lb veal, cubed
¼ lb spek, cubed
1½ tbsp salt
1 tsp ground black pepper
¼ tsp ground cloves
½ tsp grated nutmeg
½ tsp ground allspice
½ cup brown vinegar
1½ brandy (optional)
2¼-inch wide sausage casings
Place seeds into a dry frying pan.
Put the pan over low heat and allow coriander to burn slightly.
Break seeds apart with a fork, or use a coffee/spice grinder to finely grind them.
Cut all meat and spek into cubes.
Mix spek and meat together thoroughly, and then coarsely mince or grind it.
Mix in all dry spices, vinegar, and brandy with a large, two-pronged fork.
Place meat mixture in fridge, and let rest for 2 hours to blend the flavours together.
2 hours
While the meat is resting, soak the sausage casings in water for the same 2 hours.
2 hours
Fit casings over sausage maker, and fill with the meat/spice mixture. Be very careful not to over- or understuff the boerewors, as doing so will ruin them. Fill in long continuous lengths; don't make links.
Cook sausages on a barbecue, but do not prick to allow juices to escape as much of the flavour will escape with them. Cook until still pink and juicy inside