Chicago-Style Italian Sausage
Published March 22, 2023

- Total Time
- 10 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1tablespoon whole dried fennel seeds
- 1pound ground pork shoulder
- 4medium garlic cloves, finely minced
- 7grams salt (about 2 teaspoons Diamond Crystal kosher salt, 1½ teaspoons Morton’s coarse kosher salt or 1 teaspoon table salt)
- 2teaspoons garlic powder
- 2teaspoons dried oregano
- 1teaspoon dried marjoram
- ½teaspoon ground black pepper
- Large pinch of red-pepper flakes
Preparation
- Step 1
Prepare the sausage: Heat the fennel seeds in a dry skillet over medium heat, stirring frequently, until lightly toasted and very aromatic. Transfer to a mortar and pestle or spice grinder and lightly crush.
- Step 2
Combine the pork, fresh garlic, salt, garlic powder, oregano, marjoram, black pepper, pepper flakes, and toasted fennel in a large bowl. Knead aggressively with your hands until the mixture turns tacky and leaves a film behind on the bowl, a couple of minutes. (Alternatively, make the sausage in a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Knead the mixture at low speed until it forms a film on the inside of the bowl as instructed in Step 2.) Transfer to a sealed container and store in the refrigerator for up to 1 week until ready to use. You will have enough for 2 pizzas.
Private Notes
Comments
Pork turns quickly, I wouldn’t keep for a week in the fridge. Portion out and freeze what you won’t use in a day.
My father, a Chicago Italian with a mother born in Italy, said NEVER put garlic in your Italian sausage. We always used fennel, salt, black pepper and red pepper flakes - nothing else. We ground pork shoulder (multiples sometimes) and kneaded it for quite a while in a big stainless bowl until it got that sticky texture adding a few dribbles of ice water to assist the mix. The rest of the process was pretty much the same. Relatives conveniently stopped by to get a share!
@Rachael Kenji has mentioned in previous pork sausage recipes that you can use store-bought ground pork. You need a good fat ratio in pork sausage, something like 80% lean at most. I imagine store-bought ground pork varies in fat content from store to store, so some experimentation may be necessary. When I make his Food Lab sausage, I grind a pork shoulder and add some pork belly for extra fat. There's a big difference in taste and feel with the extra fat.
I love this recipe. I make a vegan version with Mushrooms. I cook them ahead of time so that they are not wet in the pizza.
It's easier to just get sausage and add chopped fennel seed to it. I like Johnsonville sausage.
Made it as written with great results, but next time I’ll cut out the garlic. It overpowers the fennel.
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