Never been to Wisconsin but I’d say its time to buy a outdoor grill.
Seriously though if you have no intentions of that (or have no outdoors to put it) there are cast iron griddle grills for stovetop use, or even ribbed fry pans. (as long as you have a good vent fan)
https://www.lodgecastiron.com/product/chef-collection-reversible-grillgriddle?sku=LCDRG
https://www.lodgecastiron.com/product/round-cast-iron-grill-pan?sku=L8GP3
Seriously though if you have no intentions of that (or have no outdoors to put it) there are cast iron griddle grills for stovetop use, or even ribbed fry pans. (as long as you have a good vent fan)
https://www.lodgecastiron.com/product/chef-collection-reversible-grillgriddle?sku=LCDRG
https://www.lodgecastiron.com/product/round-cast-iron-grill-pan?sku=L8GP3
When you type
cook bratwurst beer
into Google, you get hundreds of recipes. 98% of them tell you not to boil the bratwurst, but simmer it below the boil. Add ingredients T, U, V, W to the simmering beer. Remove brats after X minutes, dry them off, then cook on a charcoal grill for Y minutes. Serve on lobster rolls, with some or all of the extra ingredients that were simmered.
However it's tough to tell whether the author is from Florida or Utah or Delaware or British Columbia or Wisconsin, so it's tough to gauge the Wisconsin-ness of the printed recipes. Add that to my lack of a charcoal grill, and I find myself wanting recommendations from Badger State residents.
Some commenters (whose Wisconsin authenticity is impossible to determine) are adamant: use cheap lager style beer. The brats come out terrible when you use artisan beer made from hifalutin ingredients. In my first batch this morning, I used lager beer in cans which I bought from Trader Joe's, 6 cans for $6.99.
cook bratwurst beer
into Google, you get hundreds of recipes. 98% of them tell you not to boil the bratwurst, but simmer it below the boil. Add ingredients T, U, V, W to the simmering beer. Remove brats after X minutes, dry them off, then cook on a charcoal grill for Y minutes. Serve on lobster rolls, with some or all of the extra ingredients that were simmered.
However it's tough to tell whether the author is from Florida or Utah or Delaware or British Columbia or Wisconsin, so it's tough to gauge the Wisconsin-ness of the printed recipes. Add that to my lack of a charcoal grill, and I find myself wanting recommendations from Badger State residents.
Some commenters (whose Wisconsin authenticity is impossible to determine) are adamant: use cheap lager style beer. The brats come out terrible when you use artisan beer made from hifalutin ingredients. In my first batch this morning, I used lager beer in cans which I bought from Trader Joe's, 6 cans for $6.99.
I’ve tried it both ways simmer first (sauerkraut, caramelized onions,caraway seed, couple of juniper berries,lager beer) then grill ……..or grill then simmer. I prefer the latter as the brat seems more flavorful, trick of grilling first is not to burst the skin letting all the juices out (its harder than you might think!)
No matter how you do it you’d have to really try hard to make a brat taste bad!
No matter how you do it you’d have to really try hard to make a brat taste bad!
Forget Calron, we now call you Calorie.Then I must be a Gazzillionaire.
I've had crocodile. It tastes just like chicken.alligator meat, etc.
Tripe and onions (cooked in milk slowly) is nice. Kidney is great in a meat pie. Lung? Never considered that food.Tripe, kidneys, lung, are a bit much for me in general.
Hell yeah. My mother fed me brains and mashed potatoes as a kid. Loved it.Brains? Yummy.
Gotta call you out on this one Cal…….apparently you’ve never had a proper brat!Mark, simmering or boiling sausage in beer removes what you want from both of those.
Go ahead but you won’t get any cheerleaders from foodies.
Sounds like one of those was no good to begin with and you’re trying to salvage something.
Like hell it does.I've had crocodile. It tastes just like chicken.
Bob my friend, most of the sausage I eat is homemade so you may be right. I don't grind the meat into pudding but I tend to season more like Knockwurst than BratsGotta call you out on this one Cal…….apparently you’ve never had a proper brat!
I have been the 'guy with the tongs' at many a tailgate party and yes, the sausages go into the beer bath on the side burner in, of all things, an aluminum tray.
I still hate myself for those days.
Not necessary Mark. Those who cling to those theories are unaware that the flavour they are craving comes from the drippings. Nothing to do with the fire source. That's old news.Add that to my lack of a charcoal grill,
The word Highfalutin has interesting roots. Hint: it has to do with the shipping industry, specifically cruise ships.hifalutin
My name is Cal and yes, I watch Discovery channel.
I've got one of those too, mine is propane. The big smoker was my neighbors (we shared a back yard) and he started a BBQ ghost kitchen a couple years ago and is currently in process of opening his own brick and mortar shop right now. I've been helping him with it, I work in the plastics industry, so I've built the sneeze guards for his service counter, just finished some table tops for him today I need to deliver, too.
- Home
- Member Areas
- The Lounge
- The food thread