Learn how to make Chinese sausages at home with two types of flavors, spicy mala sausages and sweet Chinese sausage (lop Cheung).

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

Chinese sausages  are our favorite New Year food and it is always satisfying to have some in the kitchen cabinet. You can easily cook them along with a pot of rice or use them in fried rice.

Each year after the winter solstice, we begin to make sausages and air cured pork belly at home. Traditionally Sichuan mala sausages are smoked. However for healthier reasons, air-cured method is much more popular than traditionally smoked way. I have introduced two types of flavors–Sichuan Mala and Cantonese sweet flavor. Both of the two types are quite popular in China now.  And we usually make half Mala sausages and half sweet sausages (for the older and children).

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

Basic ingredients (this can make around 50 Chinese sausages, each around 20cm long)

  • 5 kg pork (lean meat vs fat=7:3)
  • 3 meters sausage skin (natural or synthetic)

Seasonings for sweet sausages

  • 30g  salt (curing salt)
  • 150g rock sugar, well smashed
  • 30g Chinese white spirit (In cantonese cuisine, people love to use rose wine)
  • 20g ground pepper
  • 1/2 cup light soy sauce

Seasonings for Mala Sausages

  • 60g to 75g salt (curing salt)
  • 150g chili pepper powder
  • 50g freshly ground Sichuan pepper powder or whole seeds
  • 50g rock sugar, well smashed
  • 50g Chinese white spirit

Equipment needed

  • a special sausage stuffing tool or funnel and chop stickers for stuffing the sausage
  • needle (pricking the sausages to release trapped air)
  • Scissors and cotton lines for tying the sausages
  • Clean cloth (drying the sausages after hot water washing)

No matter what flavor you prefer, cut the pork into thin and large pieces (around 6 cm long and 4 cm wide with a thickness of 0.4cm to 0.5cm). We usually use the pork leg meat. The best ratio for Mala sausages is 7 portions of lean meat and 3 portions of fat. And the recommended ratio for sweet sausage is 2:8 (fat vs lean meat). You can slightly adjust based on your own preferences.

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

Then add white spirit (Chinese Baijiu) and mix well. If you cannot find Chinese baijiu, use other hard liquid to replace.

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

Mix all the other seasonings. For Mala sausage, mix sugar, salt, chili pepper powder and Sichuan pepper powder in. For sweet sausage, mix salt, sugar and white pepper. Massage with hands and make sure all the ingredients are well combined. Then set aside for 30 minutes.

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

Then soak the skin in lukewarm water.

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

Then set up the equipment and wrap the skin over the funnel tube. Or you can use a funnel and a chopstick as plunger. Tie one end and then cut off the remaining skin.

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

The machine we use is sometime like a automatic plunger. The pork meat is pushed ahead when shaking the hand shank. If you do not have this equipment, use chopstick or wood stick to push the pork..

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

Once finished, use a cotton line (around 10cm to 12 cm long) to tie and divide the sausage into small sections around 20cm long, so we can continue hanging and drying process.

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

In a large pot, add enough warm water and clean the surface. Be gentle and don’t break the sausages. You can further sterilize the sausages by brushing hard liquid (In China, we use Chinese Baijiu 白酒). 

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

Dry with a clean cloth, then hang and dry.Left them dry outdoor during the day and hang in the kitchen at night.

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

We will need to wait for 10 days to 12 days for air drying.

Chinese Sausages

Learn how to make Chinese sausages at home
5 from 13 votes
Print Pin Rate
Course: pantry
Cuisine: Chinese, Sichuan
Keyword: sausages
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Cook Time: 4 hours
Total Time: 4 hours 30 minutes
Servings: 50 Making 50 sections of Chinese sausages (each around 18cm to 20cm long)
Calories: 294kcal
Author: Elaine

Ingredients

Basic ingredients (this can make around 50 Chinese sausages, each around 20cm long)

  • 5 kg pork , lean meat vs fat=7:3
  • 3 meters sausage skin , natural or synthetic

Seasonings for sweet sausages

  • 30 g salt , curing salt
  • 150 g rock sugar , well smashed
  • 30 g Chinese white spirit , In cantonese cuisine, people love to use rose wine
  • 20 g ground pepper
  • 1/2 cup light soy sauce , Note1

Seasonings for Mala Sausages

Equipment needed

  • a special sausage stuffing tool or funnel and chop stickers for stuffing the sausage
  • needle , pricking the sausages to release trapped air
  • Scissors and cotton lines for tying the sausages
  • Clean cloth , drying the sausages after hot water washing

Instructions

  • No matter what flavor you prefer, cut the pork into thin and large pieces (around 6 cm long and 4 cm wide with a thickness of 0.4cm to 0.5cm). We usually use the pork leg meat. The best ratio for Mala sausages is 7 portions of lean meat and 3 portions of fat. And the recommended ratio for sweet sausage is 2:8 (fat vs lean meat). You can slightly adjust based on your own preferences.
  • Then add white spirit (Chinese Baijiu) and mix well. If you cannot find Chinese baijiu, use other hard liquid to replace.
  • Mix all the other seasonings. For Mala sausage, mix sugar, salt, chili pepper powder and Sichuan pepper powder in. For sweet sausage, mix salt, sugar and white pepper. Massage with hands and make sure all the ingredients are well combined. Then set aside for 30 minutes.
  • Soak the skin in warm water.
  • Then set up the equipment and wrap the skin over the funnel tube. Or you can use a funnel and a chopstick as plunger. Tie one end and then cut off the remaining skin.
  • The machine we use is sometime like a automatic plunger. The pork meat is pushed ahead when shaking the hand shank. If you do not have this equipment, use chopstick or wood stick to push the pork into the skin.
  • Once finished, use a cotton line (around 10cm to 12 cm long) to tie and divide the sausage into small sections around 20cm long, so we can continue hanging and drying process.
  • In a large pot, add enough warm water and clean the surface (the purpose is cleaning). Be gentle and don’t break the sausages. You can further sterilize the sausages by brushing hard liquid (In China, we use Chinese Baijiu).
  • Dry with a clean cloth, then hang and dry. Use a small needle to prick the sausages to release trapped air. Left them dry outdoor during the day and hang in the kitchen at night.

Notes

Note 1: I love to add a small amount of light soy sauce to my sweet sausage but is it optional. If you plan to skip light soy sauce, increase the salt to 40g.

Nutrition

Calories: 294kcal | Carbohydrates: 6g | Protein: 17g | Fat: 21g | Saturated Fat: 7g | Cholesterol: 72mg | Sodium: 884mg | Potassium: 370mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 4g | Vitamin A: 1265IU | Vitamin C: 3mg | Calcium: 25mg | Iron: 1.3mg

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

After 12 days of air-drying in cold wind. Cut off the extra lines and place in air-tight container; freeze up for half year.

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

How to cook Chinese sausages

The easiest method is to cook a long log along with steamed rice in a rice cooker and thinly sliced before serving. Or you can pre-slice them and cook in clay pot rice.

Chinese sausages | ChinaSichuanFood.com

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96 Comments

    1. That’s just what I do, o get 6lbs at a time course ground and break it into 3lb portions, a pork butt and 3lbs of fat is perfect.

  1. I love Chinese Sausage and it’s one of my favorite breakfast paired with fried rice..now i know how easy it was to make this sausage, I’ll definitely give this a try..thanks for sharing : )

  2. i know it must be TRUE but to clarify these sausages aren’t “cooked” in any way just dried? no smoking? just drying and that is it? thanks 🙂

      1. Aloha, I live in Hawaii. I don’t have cold air, any suggestions for drying knowing that?
        Tracey

          1. If we dry in fridge, do you have any idea how long that will take? Or what to look for…perhaps weighing them before refrigeration and then when they weigh 1/4 to 1/3 less, then they are ready??

            I made some two years ago (different recipe for Shang Tang) and I left in fridge for 3 weeks and they were rock hard…had to pitch them! What a shame. I totally forgot to check on them.

  3. nice thanks Elaine—-also “well smashed” for the rock sugar—-does that mean just little bits of rock sugar are still ok—-as you probably don’t mean to crush it until it is like regular sugar—–sorry for the dumb question but I just want to make sure—- 🙂 cheers—

    1. The large pieces of rock sugar may break the skin, so we usually break them into very small pieces. But there is no need to crush it like granulated sugar.

      1. I made the savory one and it was GREAT! Thanks! I used the dried/smoked chili flakes I brought home from Guizhou on my last trip to China— I work as a Chinese cuisine cook and Sichuan dishes in general—-I lived in China several years—-one VERY important aspect of this recipe which should be perhaps changed is the “type” of salt used which is very important. The type of salt to dry air sausages MUST be what is called a “pink salt” here in the U.S.—a special salt for curing meats—and thus the beautiful red color or your photo above—-if one uses regular table salt it can be quite dangerous and even result in botulism and possible death—-so a very important point. I LOVE you site and think you are doing a great job—

        1. Thanks for pointing that out Jack. We use our common salt in China for homemade sausages. Basically I have almost no idea about the types of salt in the U.S. Can you help to explain more about this for me?

          1. Generally all meats turn brown when aged—dried—-the only way it turns a nice reddish color like these typical Chinese sausages and in western countries the salami sausages and many many others have a red color to the meat after it has cured/dried. The only way that happens is if a “curing” salt is used—-I made this recipe but upon realizing it could be dangerous I simply smoked them for an hour then pan-fried some to eat and froze the rest. There is also something called “salt-peter” which is also a curing agent used in the U.S. and other countries—-I “think” what the authors write about is “if” one doesn’t use a curing salt then “if” the conditions during air-drying is not optimal—-then—the meat could develop various dangerous bacteria. That said, if your sausage meat is quite red when finished air-drying and you are just using normal table salt—-then I don’t know what to think except that perhaps ALL salt in China is curing salt? 🙂 I don’t know…anyhow—I am still intrigued by this recipe and will attempt it with the “pink salt” or curing salt to see what happens…..cheers—-

        2. the traditional chinese sausage is always cooked before consumed in China and mostly at a very high temperature which eliminates the risk of botulism. However, if anyone were to eat it without cooking along the lines of other dried sausages then using pink salt would be highly advisable 🙂

    1. Homemade sausage has a better taste with more qualified ingredients. We use high quality pork and the freshest spices. They comes out quite satisfying.

  4. after reading many more recipes i have come to the conclusion that you are most likely correct as not many use anything other than regular salt—-seems the pin-pricking allows for the bacteria NOT to grow inside—-I think the saltpeter is used only has an added safety (probably not required) by some people in western countries who take too much of a precaution when making this. The one recipe I did notice it used is this one which seems quite nice—https://dentistvschef.wordpress.com/2014/09/22/recipe-homemade-chinese-sausage-lap-cheong-or-dry-cured-pork-sausage/#comment-12996
    cheers and thanks for your recipes! 😉

  5. Hello Elaine,
    Thank you for the gorgeous recipe and pictures. I have one question, though: what would qualify as adequately cold wind to complete the air-drying process? I I live in a very cold area, and was wondering if “any” type of weather could work out. Thank you!

  6. Hello, thank you for this! I know it’s a stupid question, but you are stuffing the meat cut up in the 6x4cm pieces, you are not grinding it correct? Thanks so much! – Emma

    1. Hi Emma,
      Yes, we do not grind the meat and there is no need to do that. When cooked, the sausages usually are diced or sliced. So it is ok to stuff the meat into large pieces.

  7. I would like to ask if you have the recipe for the “yun Cheong”.This is the type of sausage that uses liver and pork meat. Appreciate the recipe if you have it.. Thanks!

    1. Hi Carol,
      Personally I did not make the brownish black liver sausage at home. So I do not have a precise recipe. I really hope to help but sorry.

  8. Hello, if we do not cook the saussage and let it dry for several days, would not it smell bad and goes bad?

    1. Hi Ng,
      Those sausages can be only air dried in winter when the temperature is under 10 degree C. After drying, you need to transfer them to freezer for longer keeping.