Homemade Sausage Making for Beginners: Recipes and Techniques to Grind, Stuff, and Twist Artisanal Sausage at Home

·
· New Shoe Press
Ebook
144
Pages
This book will become available on October 7, 2025. You will not be charged until it is released.

About this ebook

Make the best homemade sausage with techniques from Nashville’s Porter Road Butcher in this affordable and concise edition of their first book, Homemade Sausage.

Homemade Sausage Making for Beginners is an extremely accessible guide for making sausage right in your own kitchen. Famed butchers James Peisker and Chris Carter guide you through all the necessary steps to create the very best sausage—just like they do.

In this beginner-level book, you will learn important information on sourcing your meat from local farms for the highest quality and top flavor. From there, you’ll discover techniques and trade secrets for grinding…and you’ll even find a list of the best tools for the job and how to use them successfully. Then comes the fun part: seasoning your sausage to create deep flavor profiles, one of the greatest benefits of making sausage at home. You control the spices, sodium, and more!

You will learn how to make classic links, patties, brats, keilbasas, chorizos, andouilles, and use them in some delicious recipes, such as:

  • Tomato Meat Sauce with Italian
  • Breakfast Pinwheels
  • Bangers and Mash
  • Bratwurst with Sauerkraut and Mustard
  • Jambalaya with Andouille
  • Hot Chicken Sausage Sandwich
  • Chorizo Torta
  • Merguez with Couscous
  • Boudin Balls
  • Cotechino and Lentils—Italian New Year’s Dish
  • Beer-Braised Bratwurst with whole grain mustard and sauerkraut
  • Roasted Currywurst with spatzle and braised cabbage
  • Grilled Kielbasa with Roasted Potatoes and Chimichurri Sauce

Homemade Sausage Making for Beginners is your go-to, concise, and affordable guide for making better sausage.

About the author

Chris Carter, a Nashville native who was born and raised in Hendersonville, made his entree into the restaurant industry when he was in high school working as a busboy. After graduating from Hendersonville High, he attended the University of Memphis, where he graduated with a degree in Hospitality Management. Throughout his time in college, Chris did promotions for a local radio station and additionally worked in restaurants both as a bartender and a server before leaving Memphis in pursuit of Le Cordon Bleu Culinary Institute in Scottsdale, Arizona.

While studying the culinary arts, Chris elected to continue his undergraduate education, majoring in Culinary Management. During school, he took his first kitchen job as the sous chef at Dragon Fly Cafe, but switched gears a year and a half later, working in both Atlas Bistro and Twisted Rose Winery and Eatery, further opening his eyes to the culinary arts.

It was after culinary school, however, working at Flemings Steakhouse, where Chris really mastered the art of grilling meats and came to understand and appreciate high-quality meat. In 2009, he moved back to Nashville and took a job at the Capital Grille, where he met James and jump-started their business partnership.

While not driving all over the region to pick up animals or serving our customers in the shop, Chris enjoys going to a good concert, drinking a few cold beers while fishing, roaming the aisles of Bass Pro Shop out at Opry Mills and occasionally finds his center in a sweaty hot yoga class—you ought to see this guy’s headstand.

James Peisker initially embarked on his culinary career when he was just 14 years old, working as a busboy in the diner that sat just across the street from his St. Louis home. After working his way up to a server, James was eager to continue his culinary education, so after graduating from high school, he spent time working in the kitchen at The Gatesway Home, where the chefs taught him the foundations of his culinary knowledge. He competed with the American Culinary Federation State Junior Team during the short time he spent at Forest Park Community College, an experience which eventually inspired him to attend The Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, New York. Immediately after graduating, he spent two weeks studying at the Sichuan Higher Institute of Cuisine in China, and soon made his way back to St. Louis, where he took charge of the city’s culinary scene.

James became the roundsman at Old Warson Country Club and later became the sous chef at Niche, where he managed the restaurant’s whole animal butchering and really found a passion for the craft. He ultimately did a stage at The Butcher and Larder in Chicago and now teaches our Porter Road Butchers everything he knows.

On the off chance that James isn’t working at the butcher shop, he can be found reading informational books about food, drinking plenty of whiskey, cooking elaborate meals for his wife, or pretending he is a teapot.

Reading information

Smartphones and tablets
Install the Google Play Books app for Android and iPad/iPhone. It syncs automatically with your account and allows you to read online or offline wherever you are.
Laptops and computers
You can listen to audiobooks purchased on Google Play using your computer's web browser.
eReaders and other devices
To read on e-ink devices like Kobo eReaders, you'll need to download a file and transfer it to your device. Follow the detailed Help Center instructions to transfer the files to supported eReaders.