Nduja Scotch Eggs
A runny centred Scotch Egg is a thing of beauty. Now add a little bit of spicy Italian Nduja sausage to it and it takes it up a notch.
Duchy Charcuterie makes the best nduja I’ve eaten, but sadly it’s only available in a few shops in Cornwall, so Amazon will do. Mark makes some of the best. Don’t buy the jarred stuff from the supermarkets, it’s not a patch on the real thing.
Cooking surfaces
BBQ Temperature
Ingredients
- 5 Large fresh Eggs (1 will be used as a binder)
- 350g pork sausage meat (cut open your favourite sausages)
- 1 tsp crushed black pepper
- 1 tsp Maldon salt
- 75g Nduja – add more if you like it really spicy
- 1 tsp chopped sage
- 1 tsp chopped thyme
- 2 slices of bread blended into bread crumbs
- 100g plain flour
- Vegetable oil to deep fry in
Equipment
- I use the Big Green Egg Wok and Eggspander basket
- Thermapen to measure the oil temp.
Method
Prep your Eggs
- Bring a pan to the boil
- Lower in 4 of your Eggs (keep one back)
- Boild for 5 minutes 30 seconds.
- Take them out of the boiling water andput them in to a bowl of water to cool fully (leave at least 10 minutes).
- After 10 minutes or longer, you can now gently peel the Eggs, be careful as they are still soft in the middle.
Making the Scotch Eggs
- Mix the sausagemeat, nduja, salt, pepper, thyme and sage in a bowl and then refrigerate for 20 minutes.
- For each Egg, roll in the plain flour.
- Take 1/4 of the sausage meat and flatten out into a handsized disk.
- Place the Egg into the middle of the sausage meat and bring up around your Egg. I find wetting my hands with water will enable me to smooth the sausage meat around the Egg. Keep smoothing it until your Egg is sealed in sausagemeat.
- No roll in a beaten Egg and then in the breadcrumbs.
- Repeat the process.
- Now we’re going to fry them in your Big Green Egg wok. With you Egg at about 140°C you’ll find the oil it at 180° (don’t let it get hotter).
- Now fry the Scotch Eggs for 9 to 10 minutes, turning every 2 to 3 minutes. If they are colouring too much, take them out of the oil and cook on a rack over the oil for the remainder of the time.
- Once cooked drain and place on a rack to cool a little.
- Serve warm with a bit of pickle.
Notes:
Try not to get the oil above 180°C, it will burn the outside of the Egg. I use a Thermapen to measure the oil temperature.
You can check the seasoning of your sausage meat by frying a little piece and tasting it before you use it on your Eggs.