Best Kitchen Store Online
 Location:  Home » Best Deals » KitchenAid SSA Sausage Stuffer Kit Attachment for Food Grinder  
Categories
Best Deals
Small Appliances
Cutlery & Knives
Kitchen Utensils
Cookware & Bakeware
Coffee, Espresso & Tea
Cookbooks
Storage & Organization
Kitchen Furniture
Dining Room Furniture
Kitchen & Table Linens
Dishwashers
Refrigerators
Freezers
For the Bar
Wine Accessories
Wine Cellars

KitchenAid SSA Sausage Stuffer Kit Attachment for Food Grinder

KitchenAid SSA Sausage Stuffer Kit Attachment for Food GrinderBrand: KitchenAid
Category: Kitchen

List Price: $12.99
Buy New: $6.75
as of 3/10/2010 02:05 MST details
You Save: $6.24 (48%)



New (25) Used (1) from $6.75

Seller: BEST BUY BY IS
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 78 reviews
Sales Rank: 249

Number Of Items: 1
Batteries Included: No
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 3.3 x 5.9 x 3.5
Warranty: 1

MPN: SSA
Model: SSA
UPC: 050946000169
EAN: 0050946000169
ASIN: B00004SGFQ

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Use with KitchenAid's food grinder attachment to expand a stand mixer's flexiblity
  • Ideal for making homemade bratwurst, kielbasa, and Italian or Polish sausage
  • Includes two stuffing tubes, 3/8-inch and 5/8-inch, and an instruction booklet
  • All parts dishwasher safe for easy clean-up
  • Can be used with any KitchenAid stand mixer

View Collection:


Accessories:


Similar Items:


Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Many people prefer to make their own sausages because this allows them to monitor the ingredients for quality and to use more exotic flavorings such as sun-dried tomatoes or roasted peppers.

Amazon.com Review
Use these lightweight plastic tubes to stuff your home-ground meats into natural casings for hand-made sausages. The small tube shoots out breakfast-sausage-size links; the larger one is great for boudin blanc, Italian sausage, and more. Each works in conjunction with KitchenAid's food grinder attachment, and the set comes with instructions for handling and stuffing casings. Tubes are dishwasher-safe. --Betsy Danheim


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 78
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...16Next »



4 out of 5 stars Not That Difficult To Use   February 15, 2010
S. Coalter
I purchased this to make venison sausage. I found it fairly simple to use with only a few draw backs. First two people make the job a lot easier, one to manage the meat going in and one to manage the sausage coming out. I would not attempt this alone. Second, as reviewed, the plastic dowel provided to push the meat into the grinder is not ideal. With the casing on the tube, there is a suction issue, and you seem to pull as much meat out as you push in. We solved this by using a wooden straight sided dowel that fit the hole. The rest is really just getting the hang of it which you'll figure out as you go along. We made two different recipes found on [...], and we wood smoked them. The sausage we made is AMAZING & our husbands think we are the best sausage makers in the world! If you already have the Kitchen Aid & grinder, for $10 bucks, and some effort you can make your own sausage at home!


3 out of 5 stars Value for money but not great   January 31, 2010
Mr. Adam S. Langman (Australia)
First, for the price this must be the best sausage stuffer available. But, it is not easy to or fast. This is not due to this product as such but the difficulty of feeding the sausage meat into the grinder "mouth". This is especially true if you have a very sticky mixture. It took me longer to stuff the sausages using this product than it did to measure the ingredients and grind it in the first place. I also would have preferred the tubes to be a few inches longer so that they could hold a greater length of casing.

Again, this is almost certainly the cheapest way to go (assuming you have a KitchenAid KSM150PSER Artisan Series 5-Quart Mixer, Empire Red and KitchenAid FGA Food Grinder Attachment for Stand Mixers) but it is not great at the job. I'll probably buy a purpose built machine in the future.



4 out of 5 stars Nice addition   January 31, 2010
Wiley Coyote
I made sausage for the first time the other day. It turned out terrific. This product made stuffing the sausage casings very easy. It takes about 15 seconds to stuff a large sausage link, so it moves rather smoothly. The height is tricky however, and takes a minute to adjust to. All you have to do is elevate a bowl beneath the attachment and presto, problem solved.


4 out of 5 stars Stuff It!   January 26, 2010
COSavingsShopper (Colorado)
Works great with out KitchenAid Mixer. Make your own sausage at home without all the high fat content and add spice to your liking. Great recipes online for healthy and flovorful eating.


4 out of 5 stars Good for small batches, needs two people   January 17, 2010
C. Porter
Just made sausage with it, using natural hog casing. It was easy, and not overly messy. I ground the approx. 5 lbs of 1/2 beef - 1/2 pork last night, seasoned it, and rolled the seasoned ground meat into tubes roughly the size of the grinder throat, then covered and refrigerated it. I washed all the grinder, and stuffed the next morning. Process was simple, not too messy, results look reasonably professional. I fried up a bit of the seasoned meat to taste, so I know these will come out tasting good. It took about 1/2 hour to stuff the sausage, and about 45 minutes to grind and season the meat.

After rinsing the casing overnight, I assemble the grinder minus blade and plate, just the bar nut and funnel, and grease the outside of the funnel with oil, slide the casing onto it, and tie off the tip of the casing. Turn the Kitchen Aid onto the 4 setting, and start feeding the meat into the throat. As it first comes out, there are large air bubbles, but these are worked out at the end of stuffing, using a clean sewing needle. Have one person stuff the grinder with the meat, and the other person hold the casing and support the sausage as it leaves the funnel. Squeeze a bit on the casing as the meat comes out, so you don't have overly plump sausage, you want some small bit of softness rather than a taut casing. If you keep feeding meat in consistently, air bubbles will only appear sporadically, and will be small. Put a plate or tray under the sausage, so as more sausage comes out, you can just pile it into the tray. I saved twisting into links for the very end, since I've never done it before. When you get close to the end of the casing, and there's still some on the funnel, stop the stuffing, so you will have some casing to tie off the other end of the sausage. I use household twine. After tying off, you can smooth out the sausage and use the needle to poke out air holes. When the sausage is consistent throughout, make your links by twisting the casing one or two turns at each link, in this order clockwise, counterclockwise, clockwise, counterclockwise, etc.

Problems with this product: none. The design, however, leaves quite a bit of meat still in the funnel, but perhaps all sausage makers with funnels have this "defect".


Showing reviews 1-5 of 78
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...16Next »


CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.

Copyright © 2009 Best Kitchen Store. All rights reserved.