Reykjavík Grapevine - 24.08.2012, Síða 30

Reykjavík Grapevine - 24.08.2012, Síða 30
30 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 13 — 2012 Food | DIY We were going to use this space to make some sort of sausage joke. Aren't you glad we didn't? Where can you find good uncooked sausages in Iceland? Well, the Pol- ish sausage place Pylsumeistarinn (“The Sausage Master”) at Hrís- teigur 47 by Laugalækur is pretty good. However, if you want some- thing outside of their range, or live too far away, or have a small food budget, then you might be better off making your own. Casings I managed to buy a few metres worth of casings from a grim-faced sausage master at Pylsumeistarinn, but it seems that Nokk is the place to go. Lo- cated at Kjalarvogur 5, it’s not far from Pylsumeistarinn, and judging by its website (nokk.is), it should be able to sort you out for all your casing needs. You can find collagen sausage casings, plastic casings and fibrous casings as well as phosphate, starch, fibre, spices and wood chips for smoking. But be aware that this is a wholesaler so some of these things might only be available in bulk. We wished to keep things simple this time around so we took our basic mid-sized collagen casing (non-vege- tarian) and sought out a butcher to stuff it with animal bits. Meats and stuff We had a meat-grinder, but grinding your own meat with a small grinder on a domestic scale is time-consuming and tends to give uneven results. So we needed someone that would have the meat we needed and could mince it up for us. This proved to be much harder than we thought. We started out with our smaller neighbourhood butchers. Went to both locations of Kjöthöllin (Háale- itisbraut 58 and Skipholt 70), but while they had some great cuts, they couldn't grind it up for us that time. Fortunately, however, we stumbled on the best damn butcher boy in the city at the Nóatún shop in Nóatún. He loaded us up with 2 kilos of some ex- cellent lamb fillet trimmings and pork belly, ground up and priced at a very reasonable 2200 ISK (or thereabouts). The fat ratio must have been 35–40%, which in retrospect was too high; aim- ing for 25–30% would be better. The making of So we soaked our casings and made our way up to Kópavogur with a case of beer and fresh sage and rosemary because our self-proclaimed South African sau- sage professor was hiding a Kitchen Aid stand mixer with a sausage exten- sion up in them suburban hills. After a bit of trial and error we fig- ured how to grease up the sausage ex- tension and scrunch the casings up on the metal spout. We kept it on the sec- ond or third gear (when the Kitchen Aid is being used for making cakes, those are called "settings"). We added ground Szechuan pepper and coriander along with the herbs. Then it turns out the stomper was missing so we took turns mashing the meat down the chute with a ketchup bottle, that is until the cap came f lying off and it spurted a jet of ketchup into the last leg of the second link. No dainty links were attempted— only two massive coils of meat tubes were made. It was all going on the grill anyway. The cooking of The first meat coil split like a pair of bicycle shorts on a sumo wrestler. The coals were too hot, stacked too high and we should have looked out for f lames. The second turned out perfect but re- quired constant vigilance and leaving the lid off (which meant fighting the neighbourhood cats off, but that's what water hoses are for). A few f lame-ups were averted with cheap lager and most of the six eyebrows involved survived unscathed. The sausages were served with a light potato salad and horseradish sauce and I swear we could have kept eating that the whole night. You won't regret trying your hand at making your own fresh sausages; it's worth the trou- ble. A Banger In The Mouth Is Worth Two In The Bush Three men set out on a journey of making sausage in Iceland CRAZY ALBUMS GALORE! Icelandic bands and musicians keep pumping out albums at an alarming rate—fortunately most of them are pretty good or at least worth a listen or two. This month sees a varied bunch of new releases from acts that span the musical spectrum. Soul- flavoured local faves Moses Hightower follow up their 2010 release with their sophomore effort, ‘Önnur Mósebók,’ which is already getting airplay on the strengths of first single “Stutt skref.” Everyone’s favourite noise and chaos merchants Ghostigital have finally released their long-awaited ‘division of culture & tourism’ LP, which shows off Curver and councilman Einar Örn in great form, joined by such notable artists as Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Nick Zinner, Stilluppsteypa, Dälek’s Sensational and the mighty David Byrne. Look for a review + interview in our next issue. Sudden Weather Change are also back with a scorcher—a whole four years after the release of their début LP entitled ‘Sculpture’ (a fitting name for a band of art-school graduates), the album was recorded by Ben Frost and Þorbjörn Kolbrúnarson and is already receiving rave reviews—including in this very magazine you are reading right now. Turn some pages and find out for yourself! Lastly, super-active on-line label Ching Ching Bling Bling keeps releasing digital files for the masses. Their two latest ones are by Rafsteinn (with an album called ‘Rebirth’) and Orrustubjarki (with ‘New Clear Beginning’) respectively. Check these releases and more at www. chingchingblingbling.bandcamp.com HELLO, DOLLY! So, everyone’s apparently raving about this new place, Dolly, that just opened in that house where Dubliner used to be (right by Ingólfstorg). It is reportedly a nice ol’ hipster bar, filled with joy, love and oozing Fernet Branca out of every orifice (™ HVH). We’ve been too busy working and stuff to check it out, but we do know that it is manned by expert staff, headed by Reykjavík nightlife legend Óli Hjörtur and reportedly pumps sweet tunes from the in-house stereo. Is this the place we’ve all been looking for? Let’s hope so! August WHAT THE EFF IS GOING ON??? Words Ragnar Egilsson Photos Ragnar Egilsson “ We had a meat-grinder, but grinding your own meat with a small grinder on a domestic scale is time-consuming and tends to give uneven results. „

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