Pork Sausages with Red Wine and Porcini Mushrooms
Today’s recipe is Pork Sausages with Red Wine and Porcini Mushrooms. I don’t cook or eat sausages very often. While they might taste good, they are often very fatty, and just not worth the calories that they contain. If you’re in the mood for sausages, and want to try a really good recipe, then try this one.
Both my husband and I love porcini mushrooms. On our trip to Italy this fall, we brought back a couple of bags of really nice, large, high-quality ones that I was anxious to use. They were perfect in this dish.
The recipe calls for mild pork sausage, containing no herbs or strong spices. You know, the kind that you just can’t seem to find in America. I used a sausage that was made fresh from a local place that makes sausages, but they did contain spices. Quite a bit of paprika, unfortunately. But you make do with what you can…
You brown the sausages well in olive oil. Then you add some red wine, and cook until the wine is evaporated. You then add reconstituted porcini mushrooms, along with the liquid they were soaking in (which you’ve strained several times to get out the grit that’s always there). After this is added, you slowly simmer until the liquid has evaporated. That’s it! It couldn’t be any easier. I served mine over mashed potatoes. What a very good, comforting meal this was. Thanks, Marcella, for another simple, but delicious recipe to try.
Cindy, this looks great! How wonderful to use the porcini you brought home from Italy.
We make this a lot, serving it over polenta. The mashed potatoes sound divine, I must try that next time.
Susie-I thought of serving it with polenta, but didn’t have any on hand. It is nice to use things you brought back from Italy.
The very meaty fragrant porcini you buy in Italy seem to be close to unobtainable here. Although that is no reason not use what you can find, because even lesser porcini have a lot of aroma.
Cindy, when you brown sausages, nearly all the fat melts away. What you are eating is not any fatter than a good marbled roast or steak, and much tastier.