The Mercury News

Fall for these easy-to-make merguez lamb sausage patties this autumn.

- Ty Lynda Talslev Columnist

If it’s possible to express sentiment over a sausage, then the merguez would be considered my first true love. I had my first taste of this North African sausage when I lived in Paris. It was unlike any I ever tasted. Finger-thin and fiery red-hot, these lamb sausages were taut, feisty and not to be underestim­ated. They were abundant in the myriad couscous restaurant­s sprinkled throughout the city, from street vendors, and sold in specialty markets. Eaten alone, with couscous or in a bun with frites and sauce, merguez were fragrant with cumin, coriander and fennel, dry and hot like the desert heat, and fiery red with harissa. One bite, and you were transporte­d.

Since then, and following moves farther north in Europe and to the U.S., the Parisian merguez became a wistful food memory, reminisced over at the dinner table and used as a point of comparison when encounteri­ng other sausages. Nothing seemed to match the memory; so, to that end, I began tinkering with making my own bulk sausage meat.

Bulk sausage is easy to make, since it’s simply spiced ground meat, and it was key to first nail the f lavor before attempting

to actually stuff the meat into casing. It’s also crazy simple to do — so much that I frequently return to the ground meat method and mix it into stews and sauces or form it into patties.

These patties are easy to eat, grilled or pan-fried, stuffed in pita, piled on couscous, and drizzled with a garlicky yogurt sauce. To be honest, at this point I can’t say if they precisely replicate my first love, but they sure do hit the spot.

Merguez Bulk Sausage

Makes 1½ pounds INGREDIENT­S

1 teaspoon fennel seed 1 teaspoon coriander seed 1 teaspoon cumin seed

3 garlic cloves, minced 2 tablespoon­s harissa paste 1½ teaspoons salt, or to taste 1 teaspoon sweet paprika ¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon ¼ teaspoon cayenne

1 pound ground lamb Olive oil

Yogurt Sauce:

1 cup Greek whole milk yogurt 1 large garlic clove, minced ¼ teaspoon salt

1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

DIRECTIONS

Toast the fennel, coriander and cumin seeds in a small pan over medium heat until fragrant, 1 to 2 minutes. Transfer to a mortar with pestle or spice grinder and finely grind. Transfer the spices to a large bowl. Add the garlic, harissa, salt, paprika, cinnamon and cayenne and mix to form a paste. Add the lamb and, using

your hands, mix to thoroughly combine without overmixing.

Test the flavor of the meat by panfrying a spoonful in a little olive oil in a frying pan over medium heat.the meat should have a robust flavor, full of spice and heat, and not shy of salt. When the flavor is to your liking, form the meat into 1½-inch patties and place on a plate. Cover the plate with plastic wrap and refrigerat­e for at least 2 hours or overnight.

Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil in a skillet over medium-high heat. In batches, pan-fry the patties, without overcrowdi­ng the skillet, until brown on both sides and cooked through, 6 to 8 minutes.

Whisk the yogurt sauce ingredient­s in a small bowl. Serve the patties warm with the yogurt sauce, pita bread, harissa sauce and fresh mint leaves.

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 ?? COURTESY OF LYNDA BALSLEV ?? Merguez is a well-spiced North African lamb sausage that’s easy to make at home.
COURTESY OF LYNDA BALSLEV Merguez is a well-spiced North African lamb sausage that’s easy to make at home.

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