From Season 7: Hearty Eggs for Breakfast
Americans know breakfast sausage to be a mixture of ground meat (both lean and fat, and usually pork), salt, pepper, and spices that you fry up crisp and brown to accompany eggs or pancakes. But there are a lot of options in the market. For our tasting we explored the choice between fully cooked sausage, which requires only a bit of heating (often referred to as "brown and serve"), and fresh sausage, which requires full cooking. Our sausages were pork only (nothing identified as beef, poultry, or meatless), in link form, and in the simplest possible flavor profile. Fresh and fully cooked sausages were prepared by pan-frying according to package instructions. First, we evaluated the fresh sausages alone, and then we sampled the fully cooked sausages along with the winning fresh sausage for reference.
Brown-and-serve sausage has two things going for it: It's less perishable than fresh, capable of withstanding months in the freezer, and it takes precious little time to prepare. The fresh varieties are fabricated in much the same way, at least up to a point. Pork trimmings from several primal cuts are ground, blended with ice (to help maintain temperature) and water (for workability), and seasoned. Several experts stressed that the trimmings are not scraps but pieces of lean and fat removed from large primal cuts during the fabrication of retail cuts. (Unfortunately, inquiries to manufacturers about specific types and grades of trimmings, lean-to-fat ratios, particle sizes, quantities of water, seasonings, and casings were unerringly met with the word "proprietary.")
If sausages are to be sold as a brown-and-serve product, they are sent through gigantic cookers that often use steam and convection to cook them to 170 degrees. The sausages then may or may not be sent to a browning chamber, where gas-fired flame jets enhance both color and flavor. A less expensive way to color the steam-cooked sausages is to dip them in caramel coloring. The sausages are then quickly cooled and blast-frozen for packaging.
Frankly, it came as a huge surprise that the fully cooked, brown-and-serve sausages did extremely well in the tasting; this group included our winner. We concluded that the explanation for our findings is control. Fully cooked sausage introduces many variables, among them the evaporation of moisture, rendering of fat, and denaturing (reconfiguration) of proteins. But these variables are also opportunities for manufacturers to engineer the product. With specific appearance, flavor, and texture attributes in mind, manufacturers can manipulate the recipe, cooking temperature(s) and time, and humidity with great exactitude.
And there is another possible advantage of manufacturing brown-and-serve sausage. Oxidation of fat degrades flavor. Many companies combat this effect by adding preservatives such as propyl gallate, citric acid, butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA), and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT), but the quick deep freeze that brown-and-serve sausages undergo during processing adds an extra level of protection against oxidation. Sure enough, our tasting bore out this theory, as tasters were more likely to use terms such as "off," "musty," "stale," and "not fresh" to describe the fresh sausage than the brown and serve.
We found a host of reasons for our winner products’ superiority. One reason that stood out and tracked with our research was that these brown-and-serve sausages are browned with a flame rather than tinted with caramel coloring. Fat, which provides both flavor and juiciness in sausage, also made a difference. With its relatively high fat content (44 percent), the winning sausage was described by tasters as being juicy and tasting strongly of pork.
Another point was seasoning. Tasters scrutinized every sample for saltiness, sweetness, and spiciness and marked down samples they perceived as too salty, sweet, or spicy. The lab could not analyze for specific spices, and none of the manufacturers we contacted would reveal their seasoning blend, but balance between salt, sweet, and spice was important to our tasters.
What, then, to buy? If what you desire most in your pork breakfast sausage is convenience, you may now approach fully cooked, frozen products without fear of sacrificing flavor and reliable texture. This is one of those rare cases in which a "processed" food may in fact be superior to the "real thing."
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| Product Tested | Price* | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Highly Recommended | |||
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Columela Extra Virgin Olive OilOur favorite premium extra-virgin olive oil from a previous tasting, Columela is composed of a blend of intense Picual, mild Hojiblanca, Ocal, and Arbequina olives. This oil took top honors for its fruity flavor and excellent balance. Tasters praised its big olive aroma, big olive taste with a buttery flavor that is sweet and full, with a peppery finish. One taster said: Its very green and freshlike a squeezed olive. Another simply wrote: Fantastic. |
$19 for 17 oz | |
| Recommended | |||
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Lucini Italia Premium Select Extra Virgin Olive OilTasters noted this oils flavor was much deeper than the other samples, describing it as fruity, with a slight peppery finish, buttery undertones, and a clean, green taste that was aromatic, with a good balance. It has the flavor that some good EVOOs have, said one admiring taster. |
$19.99 for 500 ml ($39.98 per liter) | |
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Colavita Extra Virgin Olive OilVirtually tied for second place, this oil was deemed round and buttery, with a light body and flavor that was briny and fruity, very fine and smooth, and almost herbal, with great balance. Good olive flavor. I could smell it and taste it, approved one taster. In a word, pleasant. |
$17.99 for 750 ml ($23.98 per liter) | |
| Recommended with Reservations | |||
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Bertolli Extra Virgin Olive OilA clear step down from the top oils, tasters noted overall mild flavor and very little aroma, with only a hint of green olive and a hint of spiciness at the end. In pasta, it was initially not complex, but gradually bloomed in your mouth. Overall, it was worthy of a second bite. |
$12.49 for 750 ml ($16.65 per liter) | |
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Filippo Berio Extra Virgin Olive OilWhile some tasters found this oil sweet and buttery with medium body and slight spice at the end, others complained that it had zero olive flavor and was so floral its almost like eating perfume; still others noted a bitter aftertaste. In pasta, it was extremely mild to the point of being boring. |
$10.99 for 750 ml ($14.65 per liter) | |
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Goya Extra Virgin Olive OilComments: The best comments tasters could muster were mild and neutral. Some liked it on pasta (though one called it Snoozeville), but complaints were myriad: metallic, soapy, briny, hints of dirt. Carped one taster, I cant imagine what is in here, but they have a nerve calling it EVOO. |
$13.99 for 1 liter | |
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Pompeian Extra Virgin Olive OilComments: While some tasters called this oil mild and smooth, others found it thin, greasy and not very interesting. I bet the cooking water had more olive flavor, speculated one taster; could be canolait is so bland, mused another. A few noted an objectionable aftertaste that was soapy, chemical or mentholthink |
$9.99 for 473 ml ($21.12 per liter) | |
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Botticelli Extra Virgin Olive OilWhile a few tasters liked this potent oil, others said they detected mushroom, rotten walnuts, a Band-Aid wrapped in a cherry blossom, and a quality that was downright medicinalTriaminic, anyone? Several deemed it overpowering and musky, with a rank, off-flavor. Tastes not like olives but like the armpits of olive laborers, shuddered one. |
$10.99 for 1 liter | |
| Not Recommended | |||
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Carapelli Extra Virgin Olive OilItaly, Greece, Spain, Tunisia, Turkey, Cyprus, Morocco, and Syria Comments: Nothing remarkable herejust greasy, no flavor, summarized one taster. Where did the olive go? said another. This oil was judged to have a kind of rancid aftertaste that was reminiscent of not only soil, tree resin, and ammonia and grass, but even kitty litter smells and a set of sweaty hockey pads. |
$10.99 for 750 ml ($14.65 per liter) | |
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DaVinci Extra Virgin Olive OilAlthough this oil won top place in a previous tasting, because olive oil is an agricultural product, it can differ from year to year. This time, tasters found it washed out and muted, if nice, in a totally bland and unremarkable way. Tasted plain, objections ranged from insipid, with no real complexity to tastes like EVOO mixed with vegetable oil. |
$17.99 for 1 liter | |
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Star Extra Virgin Olive OilOrigin: Spain, Italy, Greece, and Tunisia Comments: Boring and not very complex, this oil came across as plastic-y and industrial; some hint of olives, but it fades quickly. Tasters identified off-flavors that were unpleasant, dirty, like rubber and metal, with a sour aftertaste, or at least a bit funky, with a strange taste that was spicy, but in a motor oil kind of way. One simply wrote, Blech. |
$11.99 for 750 ml ($15.99 per liter) | |