I was a little hesitant to actually title this recipe “Whole30 sausage,” because it’s so good and not something that only Whole30-ers can eat. I know I’ll be eating it before, during, and after my Whole30. However, after doing a bit of research, it appears that a lot of you are searching for Whole30 sausage, and I aim to please. If you came here after searching for a Whole30 sausage recipe, rest assured this fits the bill! If you’re just looking for a delicious pork and apple sausage recipe free of all the weird ingredients you find in some grocery store sausage, you’re in luck too. If you have done a Whole30, you probably know that Whole30 compliant sausage can not only be hard to find, but it can also be very expensive. This is such a great solution because it isn’t hard to make, and you know exactly what you’re putting into it.
About this Homemade Whole30 Sausage
The idea for this recipe was actually inspired by Melissa Hartwig’s latest cookbook, Whole30 Fast & Easy. In this cookbook, there is a recipe for pork and apple meatballs over spaghetti squash. I made those and after tasting them, thought they’d translate really well into a breakfast sausage recipe. (I was right.) I made a few changes and the result is absolutely delicious.
How to Make Homemade Sausage
I know I say every recipe is easy, but it’s true. I only have time for easy recipes so that’s all I typically share with you guys. I know you’re all busy too, so why bother with complicated recipes when you can have something delicious with so little effort? The process of making sausage patties is similar to making meatloaf, meatballs, or even burgers; you just form it into a different shape. I don’t sauté the apples and onions like Melissa does in the meatball recipe I adapted this from. I also don’t peel the apple — I’m all about keeping things simple and easy! If any large pieces of apple peel come off when you’re shredding the apple, you can discard those, but the little pieces of apple peel cook right into the sausage and provide added nutrition. Since you’re shredding the onion instead of dicing it, it cooks right along with the sausage as well, making the extra step of sautéing unnecessary. Hooray! One more note about shredding both the apple and onion – try to preserve the juice produced when you do this. It will add great flavor and moisture to the pork sausage. This is also super important if you’re choosing a leaner meat such as turkey or chicken — that moisture will really help prevent the sausages from drying out.
Make it Your Own
Turn up the heat! Add more cayenne or red pepper flakes. What to make it a little more lean? Substitute ground turkey or ground chicken breast for the pork. You’ll want to use a little more fat/oil when cooking them if you choose to do this. Freeze them! You can separate them into patties and freeze them either raw or cooked. If you freeze them raw, you can separate them into patties right in a freezer bag. In her turkey breakfast sausage recipe, Rebecca shows a great visual of that technique.
More great breakfast ideas
Egg White Frittata with Green Chiles (leave the cheese and milk out for a Whole30 breakfast) Copycat Starbucks Egg White Wrap (not Whole30, but delish!) Butternut Squash Prosciutto Breakfast Hash from The Little Ferraro Kitchen Whole30 Vegetarian Power Bowls from Well Plated (I’d eat ’em for breakfast, but also a great lunch!) …or check out my entire archive of breakfast recipes!
I love serving these with fried eggs and a crisp salad with apples to drive home the apple flavor. I’ve also chopped them up in small pieces to use in a breakfast hash which is delicious as well! They’d also be phenomenal on a breakfast sandwich if you’re not doing Whole30 – I’m imagining a soft, flaky biscuit and a runny fried egg….YUM.