Sausage Rolls

Side Dishes —
esse baked sausage rolls

Whenever I’m baking I’m often ignoring the cake tins and focussing on the savoury side of life.

Shop bought puff pastry has become the norm, even in the majority of restaurants and bakeries a “bought in” puff pastry solution is very much the order of play – which I always think is a shame – not only because of some of the more dubious ingredients contained within the vast majority of said products but because making your own “rough puff” takes minutes, is super easy and the results are epic – less “fully puffed” than the full on puff pastry but really easy to work with, pretty much impossible to get wrong and much, much tastier. So, really this is a simple recipe for rough puff pastry, but I’ve also included another seasonal ingredient – Venison, as it’s such a tasty and sustainable option, it can be a little lean but with the buttery pastry I hardly think you will notice.

Because I also like some spice – I have made these more along the lines of a chorizo in terms of seasoning too, the results are somewhat addictive – if you have a handy supply of pheasant you can substitute minced pheasant in or of course get yourself to the local butcher for some quality coarse minced pork and stay traditional – it is totally up to you.

Makes: 6 med sausage rolls
Prep time 1 hour
Cooking time 30 mins

For the pastry

  • 175g strong white bread flour
  • 150g cold butter, diced small
  • A good pinch of salt
  • A little ice cold water

Place everything except the water in the food processor. Pulse the machine a few times to begin to break up the butter, but not too much! We need lumps of butter in there, start drizzling in some water as you keep pulsing the machine, you should quickly find you have a very lumpy buttery dough, in short it will look like it’s gone horribly wrong.

Tip this out onto a lightly floured surface and bring the dough together a little using your hands. Now, with a rolling pin roll out the dough till its half its original width, then fold the top into the middle and repeat with the bottom so you have effectively created a 3 layer scenario. Repeat that process twice more, what we are doing here is gently adding a few layers to you pastry, which will add lift, character and joy – then set the dough aside and leave it to chill in the fridge for 30 mins before removing it and allowing it to come up towards room temperature again before you make the sausage rolls.

For the filling

  • 30g olive oil
  • 350g minced venison
  • 1 clove of garlic
  • 2 table spoons red wine
  • 1 pinch chilli flakes
  • 30g smoked paprika
  • A good pinch of mixed dried herbs
  • A few rasps of lemon zest
  • ½ teaspoon fennel seeds, lightly crushed
  • 5g salt

Crush then finely chop your garlic, add this to everything else and mix it well.

You can store this mix in the fridge until needed – it should keep in a tub very well for 4 or 5 days.

Making the rolls and baking them

Set your ESSE oven to 190 degrees and open the steam vent.

You will need

  • 1 egg, beaten
  • A pastry brush
  • A little flaky salt and a few fennel seeds
  • Flour for dusting

Roll out your pastry on a lightly floured surface – you are aiming for a long oblong shape about the thickness of a 50p piece, so don’t worry too much, but do you best to make it long and it wants to be roughly three times the width that the sausage meat will be – I like a thick sausage roll so I tend to aim for 15 – 20 cm roughly.

Shape the sausage meat filling onto the pastry more or less in the middle of the pastry. Brush a little beaten egg onto the front edge of the roll and then put the top edge over the filling and “glue” it to the egg washed strip.

Prick holes in the pastry along the top of the roll and then egg wash that too – sprinkling with salt and a few fennel seeds afterwards, all that remains is to slice the long roll into the sizes you want. Then place these on a non-stick baking sheet or one lines with non-stick parchment.

Depending on the size of your sausage, they will cooking in between 20 and 40 mins, you want them golden brown on the top and crisp on the bottom – and it is worth turning the tray round half way though. Once you are satisfied that they are nicely cooked move the tray from the oven. Using a palette knife or some trusty tongs move to a cooling rack for 10 mins before you get carried away and eat them all.

There you go, a super simple recipe that will show off your baking skills and your oven beautifully – enjoy.


Recipe created by Tim Maddams. Tim is a chef, food writer and cookery teacher who produces seasonal recipes for ESSE at his home in Inverness using ingredients grown in his kitchen garden. ESSE first met Tim over ten years ago when he regularly co-featured in the hit TV series River Cottage. During his time as head chef at River Cottage Tim pioneered ethical, local, seasonal produce and became a key spokesperson in the area of responsibly-sourced food.

Tim’s aim is to show off the “tremendous versatility” of the ESSE 600 X electric range cooker. The new 600 X has ESSE’s classic heat storage construction, patented ovens, beautiful colour finishes and the reassuring ‘solidity’ with modern, electric controllability and responsiveness.

Share — Twitter IconFacebook IconPinterest IconInstagram Icon