Kiolbassa Beef Smoked sausage at Costco |
I do hope Floridians appreciate what's coming their way.
What is now available is the pork smoked, and beef smoked sausages. I notice the lengths of the links in Costco are longer.
Texas sausage links are typically the length of a hot dog bun. But Floridians are more used to seeing sausage as packaged by Garcia brand from Dutch Packing Company in Miami, or from a number of sausage makers in Georgia that have enjoyed strong market share in Florida for some time now.
These Kiolbassa offerings are not much different from what Floridians are accostumed to seeing. Maybe the idea is to show non-Texans a familiar comfort food?
I am looking forward to the day Florida will see some Texas styles that are more Texas than mainstream, such as mesquite smoked or beef with jalapeno.
Slice Kiolbassa sausage with Alma's pasta |
Fifty-three Costco stores from Atlanta to Miami, including four stores in Puerto Rico, are carrying the San Antonio-based Kiolbassa Provision Company product line, according to Kiolbassa President Michael Kiolbassa.
Kiolbassa is also in Costco stores in Alabama, Tennessee, North Carolina and South Carolina, as part of this expanded deal with Costco’s.
Kiolbassa is one of the healthiest sausages on the grocery shelf. These are choice meats with fresh spices, no fillers, no MSG, naturally smoked and gluten free. They have the lowest sodium content among all national competitors.
Hey, if the flavors are genuine, you don't have to disguise your product with a lot of salt.
“Our premium products continue to attract customers and reinforce our company philosophy of Passion Makes Perfect, as consumers demand quality products for their hard-earned grocery dollars,” explains Kiolbassa, 50, who is the third generation Kiolbassa to lead the family-owned company that has been featured on the Food Network.
Costco stores will carry the company’s signature All Beef premium smoked sausage, considered the sausage-lover’s sausage because of its unique “chop” bite and richly smoked flavor achieved through small batch production using a time-honored recipe that draws on the family’s strong Polish roots. Kiolbassa was founded in 1949.
This year alone, the 25,000-sq.-ft. Texas plant expects to produce more than 12 million lbs. of sausage to be sold in 1,255 stores in 25 states, Puerto Rico and Mexico.
Now, for some eats!
I made a spaghetti entre with a portion of this batch. But when I decided on spaghetti, I had not figured on being out of tomato paste, so I invented a sauce. This sauce involved a couple of large tomatoes, a chopped poblano pepper, a couple of very finely chopped chipotle (morita) peppers, a finely chopped ancho, a couple of cloves chopped garlic, some chopped onion (quantity to your taste; some people aren't too keen on a lot of onion), and finally, a couple of stalks of chopped celery.
I put all of the above ingredients in a blender, except the celery. I grilled the sliced up beef sausage, then tossed in the sauce with chopped celery and a little water. Easy on the water; you don't want your sauce too thin.
While all this is happening, I boiled angel hair pasta. Let it boil for six minutes. Angel hair cooks fast and you want to keep it al dente. Then rinse and put in a separate hot pan with olive oil to keep it from sticking.
I did not use mushrooms this time. But if you want it to have an earthier taste, that's a good idea. Now doesn't this look good? Buen provecho!
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