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  2. Debrecener - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debrecener

    Debrecener sausages in a plate Debreceni (indicated by green arrows) atop a wood platter (festival of meat) at a Hungarian restaurant. A debrecener (Hungarian: debreceni kolbász, German: Debre(c)ziner, Italian: Salsiccia di Debrecen) is a pork sausage of uniform fine texture and reddish-orange colour, named after the Hungarian city of Debrecen. [1]

  3. Hungarian sausages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_sausages

    Cserkész kolbász is a cooked smoked sausage made from beef and pork. Debreceni kolbász is usually unsmoked or more mildly smoked, with a strong paprika flavour and used for cooking. Lecsókolbász, a spicy cooked smoked sausage made specifically for serving as part of the dish lecsó, [6] a vegetable stew with peppers and tomatoes.

  4. Sausage making - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sausage_making

    Sausage making originally developed as a means to preserve and transport meat. Primitive societies learned that dried berries and spices could be added to dried meat. The procedure of stuffing meat into casings remains basically the same today, but sausage recipes have been greatly refined and sausage making has become a highly respected ...

  5. Carniolan sausage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carniolan_sausage

    Care should be taken when preparing them, because the cheese can become quite hot; the sausages should not be cut or poked while cooking, otherwise the melting cheese would be released. The sausage can be served with mustard, ketchup and a piece of dark bread; or – in the most common form in Austria – as a Käsekrainer-Hot-Dog.

  6. Austrian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_cuisine

    Austrian cuisine has many different sausages, like Frankfurter, Käsekrainer, Debreziner (originating from Debrecen in Hungary), or Burenwurst, Blunzn made out of pig-blood and Grüne Würstl—green sausages. Green means raw in this context—the sausages are air dried and are consumed boiled.

  7. Swiss sausages and cured meats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_sausages_and_cured_meats

    Sausages are primarily made of pork. Three types are made in Switzerland: grilling (blanched) sausages, raw sausages and cooking sausages. [13] Among cooking sausages is also a subcategory of raw sausages with interrupted maturation (*), often called saucissons.

  8. Sausage roll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sausage_roll

    A Dutch sausage roll (saucijzenbroodje) showing the puff pastry surrounding the roll of minced meat inside. The basic composition of a sausage roll is sheets of puff pastry formed into tubes around sausage meat and glazed with egg or milk before being baked. [2] They can be served either hot or cold.

  9. Fermented sausage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermented_sausage

    The two main types of fermented sausage are the dry, salted, spiced sausages found in warmer climates and fermented semidry sausages found in cooler, more humid climates. Since the dry sausages of the Mediterranean, in countries such as Italy, Spain, and Portugal contain 25–35% water and more than 4% salt, they may be stored at room temperature.