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  2. Sausage casing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sausage_casing

    The latest generation of collagen casings are usually more tender than natural casings and do not exhibit the "snap" or "bite" of natural casing sausages. Most collagen casings are edible, but a special form of thicker collagen casings is used for salamis and large caliber sausages where the casing is usually peeled off the sausage by the ...

  3. Viscofan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viscofan

    Viscofan is a Spanish manufacturer of casings for meat products operating in over 100 countries. [2]It is a global producer with the capacity to manufacture the four main technologies available in the artificial casings market (cellulose, collagen, fibrous and plastic).

  4. Sausage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sausage

    Today, natural casings are often replaced by collagen, cellulose, or even plastic casings, especially in the case of industrially manufactured sausages. However, in some parts of the southern United States , companies like Snowden's, Monroe Sausage , Conecuh Sausage, and Kelly Foods still use natural casings, primarily from hog or sheep intestines.

  5. List of sausages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sausages

    Chorizo sausage Saucisson Skilandis Sausages being smoked. This is a list of notable sausages.Sausage is a food and usually made from ground meat with a skin around it. Typically, a sausage is formed in a casing traditionally made from intestine, but sometimes synthetic.

  6. Charcuterie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charcuterie

    The tube casings can vary, but the more common animal-derived casings include sheep, hog, or cattle intestinal linings. Additionally, animal stomachs and bladders, as well as edible artificial casings produced from collagen and inedible plant cellulose or paper, are used. Inedible casings are primarily used to shape, store, and age the sausage. [6]

  7. Devro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devro

    Devro was founded as a new business of Johnson & Johnson in 1960 after its researchers developed a material suitable for the manufacture of sausage casings from collagen. The business name was devised as an acronym of "Development and Research Organisation", the Johnson & Johnson unit from which it emerged. [4]

  8. Sausage making - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sausage_making

    In this style of sausage, after stuffing into 70 mm (2.8 in) to 76 mm (3.0 in) hog buns or fiberous casings, the sausage is submerged in 70 °C (158 °F) water for 2 to 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours until the internal temperature reaches 67 °C (153 °F). At this point the sausage should be chilled in ice water, then cold smoked at a temperature of 46 to ...

  9. Saveloy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saveloy

    Although the saveloy was traditionally made from pork brains, the ingredients of a shop-bought sausage are typically pork (58%), water, rusk, pork fat, potato starch, salt, emulsifiers (tetrasodium diphosphate, disodium diphosphate), white pepper, spices, dried sage, preservatives (sodium nitrite, potassium nitrate), and beef collagen casing.

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