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  2. Jimmy Dean (brand) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Dean_(brand)

    Jimmy Dean's main products are chicken and pork sausage based breakfast items. The brand is known to have quick and simple meals that are easily cooked and microwavable. Jimmy Dean products can be sold raw, frozen, precooked, assembled, or individually wrapped.

  3. Air-Fryer Sausage Patties - AOL

    www.aol.com/air-fryer-sausage-patties-141042301.html

    These savory pork air-fryer sausage patties are quick to prepare on a moment's notice, but you can also mix a couple of batches and have them ready to go in your freezer. Just pop them the air ...

  4. 25 Must-Make Breakfast Sausage Recipes For Breakfast ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/25-must-breakfast-sausage-recipes...

    To cook breakfast sausage patties, first you need to form the patties from your ground pork mixture; the size is your preference. Breakfast sausage patties can be pan-fried, cooked in the oven ...

  5. 45 Fast-Food Copycat Recipes You Can Make at Home - AOL

    www.aol.com/45-fast-food-copycat-recipes...

    1. McDonald's Sausage and Egg McMuffin. Four ingredients — an English muffin, cheese, egg, and pork patties — are all that stand between you and your favorite fast-food breakfast after the ...

  6. Breakfast sausage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breakfast_sausage

    Breakfast sausage patties, frying in a pan Breakfast sausage links as part of a full breakfast. Breakfast sausage (or country sausage) is a type of fresh sausage, typically made from pork, that is a common breakfast food in the United States. [1] In the United States, the predominant flavorings used for seasoning are black pepper and sage.

  7. List of McDonald's products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_McDonald's_products

    McRib – a sandwich featuring a ground pork patty coated in barbecue sauce, slivered onions, and pickles. First seen in test-market stores near interstate highways around Milwaukee and Madison, Wisconsin in the late 1970s (along with early tests of personal-sized pizza), the McRib was more widely released in 1981 but pulled from the menu in 1985.