Mexican Chorizo
By: Anonymous
Published: Thursday, December 10, 2009 - 2:47am

Ingredients




1 pound /450g hot red peppers be brave and try Habanero!
1 pound /450g Anaheim red sweet chiles
10 pounds pork shoulder make sure you have plenty of fat with it, 35-40%%
15 clv garlic, peeled and coarsely chopped
 cup salt
 cup freshly and coarsely ground black pepper

Preparation

1 Put together the meat grinder attachment and sausage stuffer piece and insert it into the head of the mixer. Tighten well. 2 Cut up the ingredients into pieces that will fit through the feeder and toss together thoroughly. Place a bowl under the outlet end and get the sausage casing ready. Use the stomper to push the sausage ingredients down and into the grinder and guide the ground mixture into the casing. When done, tie the casing off into 5"/13cm lengths. If you prefer, you can also grind directly into a bowl and make patties to fry. 3 To store, you can hang the links up to dry if you live in a dry enough climate, or you can refrigerate them up to 10 days or freeze them. The traditional way to store them when not dried, however, is to pack them in lard, where they keep a very long time without refrigeration. Packing the chorizos in lard also greatly increases their storage life in the refrigerator. The ratio for storage is 1/2 gallon lard per pound of sausages or 2kg lard per 500g sausages. If you choose this st 4 If you have dried the chorizo, you can eat as is once thoroughly dried. If not, you can fry it or cook it in traditional soup and stew dishes.