2008
Tarting up Turkey
One of my most used pieces of kitchen equipment is this Kenwood Chef mixer that must be at least 35 years old, possibly older, but is still in perfect nick and complete with its original bowl.
It belonged to my mother who also gave it heavy use, so whatever it originally cost it was certainly very cheap at the price and is a testament to good design.
She acquired over the years various additions to this workhorse, some successful, some less so - a robust blender that would grind stones is still in use but a potato peeler that turned out to be considerably more trouble than it was worth has long disappeared. One attachment I use infrequently is the mincer, mainly because cleaning it is such a tremendous pain, involving serious levels of dismantling and poking at little holes and grooves to get rid of the remnants of meat that cling to every part of its inner workings.
However sometimes it’s worth it, and one meat I use it for is turkey. For all it’s popularity and association with festivity, turkey is a pretty boring meat. It doesn’t have a whole lot of flavour and is can be dry as a bone, so it needs work to make it interesting. But Lidls Turkey breast is good value and so is a fairly regular buy.
Often I stir-fry strips of it or slice it, stuff it and wrap it in prosciutto, but these turkey sausages are probably my favourite way of cooking it. Though I did slightly overcook the ones below, they were still very tasty.

You can use ready minced turkey for these, but in my experience it’s less successful. Any that I’ve tried seems to be pumped with water and as a result the sausages shrink up and go a bit soggy when cooked. I think we’ll all agree that a shrunken soggy sausage is a truly sad thing.
Moving on. Here is what you’ll need to make 16 sausages:
- 1 lb raw turkey breast, finely minced
- 2 roast red peppers (from the Lidl jars of pepper)
- 1 red chili
- A small onion
- 2 cloves of garlic
- Putza Spice mix
- 2 oz butter
- About 3 inches of tomato puree from a tube
- 1 egg, lightly beaten
- Salt and black pepper
Finely chop the onion, chili and garlic. Melt the butter in a pan and gently fry the chopped veg - you don’t want it to brown. While it’s frying chop or mash the red peppers roughly. Add them to the pan and season the lot with putza (which is really good in this) - about a heaped teaspoon full, though I tend to just shake in what looks about right.
When this is done, scrape it all into a shallow bowl, making sure you get all of the butter, and put it into the fridge to cool. It should be completely cool before you mix it with the turkey - which takes about as long as it takes to mince the turkey and clean the mincer.
Once the cooked veg is cool just mix it thoroughly with the minced turkey, add the tomato puree, season with salt and pepper and then mix in the egg. Pound this about a bit while you mix it - you need it very well blended together and kind of mushy.
The result is a little sloppy, but with care you can form it into sausage shapes. These need to rest in the fridge for at least an hour before you cook them to firm up.
I cook them in a George Foreman Grill, but you can grill them in the normal way or even bake them.
The addition of butter is in my opinion essential - turkey breast has almost no fat and without some the sausages are just too dry. But if you are watching fat you could try it without or with less.
We had these last night with mushrooms and cheesy mashed cauliflower.
Every time I make them I think that I should maybe buy the sausage maker attachment for the Kenwood, but it would probably just be creating more washing-up.

October 2nd, 2008 at 11:29 pm
I’ve been dipping in to your site once in a while, and find it very interesting. I’m a long-time convert to Lidl and Aldi - I find a lot of their stuff great.
As a vegetarian, maybe I shouldn’t be telling you this :), but I heard a great tip for cleaning mincers. If you put some bread through, once you’ve finished, it helps to clean a lot of the meaty bits off, and makes it far easier to clean. And you have a nice pile of breadcrumbs!
Considering that you’re on a low-carb kick, you could try it with a few onions, or other not completely rock-hard veggies. You could throw them into the mix for burgers etc, making them both more economical, and healthier!