The Best Way to Grill Sausages | The Food Lab

Grilled hot dogs and sausages are ideal foods for a backyard cookout. That is, provided you do two simple things: start with great links, and don't mess 'em up.

By
J. Kenji López-Alt
Kenji Lopez Alt
Culinary Consultant
Kenji is the former culinary director for Serious Eats and a current culinary consultant for the site. He is also a New York Times food columnist and the author of The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science.
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Updated May 14, 2024

Haven't you ever wished that your juicy pork chops were perfectly seasoned all the way to the center? Or that your pork tenderloin were just a bit juicier and fattier? Or maybe that your flavorful, smoky ribs had a decisive snap when you bit in? Sausages are like the Voltron of the grilled-pork world, combining the best characteristics of all the other popular cuts of pork into one perfectly juicy, always-tender, well-seasoned-through-and-through, universe-saving package.*

*Okay, I lied about the universe-saving part.

On top of all that, sausages are inexpensive (they're made with cheap cuts, like shoulder and trimmings); are available in convenient serving-sized packages; and, even at the crummiest of supermarkets, come in at least a half dozen flavors. They really are one of the ideal foods for the backyard grill.

Ideal, that is, provided you do two simple things: start with great sausages, and don't mess 'em up. That's easier said than done.

With 18 pounds of sausages in hand and a few bags of coal, I fired up the grill last weekend for a marathon of prodding, poking, flipping, burning, slow-cooking, steaming, smoking, and otherwise manhandling the tube steak until I arrived at what I believe is the best method to take them from raw to cooked on the grill. Here's what went down.

Sausage Fails

Before we get to the right way to cook sausage, let's talk about some of the wrong ways:

The Chest-Burster

A sausage on the grill that has burnt slightly on the outside and burst open

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

A burnt and busted-open casing, sooty flavor, juices lost to the grill gods.

What happened: This is what happens when you throw a sausage over the highest possible heat. Just like other meats, sausages contract as they cook, and in proportion to how high a temperature they're cooked to. Cook a sausage over high heat, and the casing and outer layers will quickly get very hot, causing them to contract a great deal. Meanwhile, the raw sausage meat in the center won't have contracted at all.

What happens next is sort of like what happens to the Incredible Hulk, but instead of the Hulk growing faster than his clothes, imagine his clothes shrinking in proportion to his body.

The casing and outer layers crack and burst open. Liquefied fat and expelled meat juices from the center pour out onto your fire, causing it to flare up and leaving a sooty deposit all over your sausage. The result is an acrid-tasting sausage, with a dry, juiceless center.

The Two-fer

A sausage cut in half, with labels pointing out the raw center and burnt, cracked exterior

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

An inedible, raw center and a burnt, cracked exterior. Simultaneously overcooked and undercooked. No good.

What happened: Another product of high-heat cooking. This time, you wise up and add the sausages to a moderately hot grill. No good: You still end up with a sausage that cooks too fast, so the exterior is overcooked before the center has a chance to come up to temperature.

The Unloved Grandmother

Half a cooked sausage, with a label pointing out its dry and wrinkled exterior

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Okay, so this time, you take it to the opposite extreme, cooking the sausage the entire way through on the cooler side of the grill. You get a tiny bit of browning, no bursting at all, and when you pull it off the heat, it looks plump and juicy as can be. But within moments, it deflates like a sad balloon: a wrinkled, dry shell of its former self.

What happened: Without enough heat, by the time you get any significant browning on the exterior, the interior layers will have already overcooked. Steam and expanded muscle tissue will give the sausage a plump appearance while it's still hot, but as soon as it comes off the grill and cools slightly, it shrivels up again.

The Science of Sausage

Essentially, a well-made sausage is a matrix of interconnected meat proteins. As this web of proteins cooks, it firms up, trapping fat, meat juices, and flavorings in its matrix. Both the fat and the salt give the sausages an advantage over whole cuts of meat when it comes to retaining moisture and flavor during cooking.

Fat plays a vital role, as it's the primary component that gives our mouths the sense of "juiciness." When you bite into a juicy steak, it's mainly the intramuscular fat, known as "marbling," that's making it juicy, not the actual meat juices, which are largely water-based. Sausages are a bit like steaks, with the optimal amount of marbling built right into them.

A properly made sausage should have discrete bits of fine fat blended in with the meat, in a proportion of anywhere from 20% up to 40% (or even more). Most hover around the 30% mark, making them richer and juicier than almost any steak you'll find outside of Japan.

Salt is also responsible for a sausage's good texture. Aside from seasoning the meat, it dissolves the protein myosin, one of the major components of muscle fibers. By dissolving it, salt allows the meat to retain more moisture, as well as shrink less during cooking (the two phenomena are related). This means that, because you are cooking your meat to a set temperature, a well-made, properly salted sausage will retain more moisture than a pork chop or steak cooked to the same temperature.

Sausages cooking on a charcoal grill

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

That said, the rules of cooking meat still apply to sausages: You do not want to overcook them. Here's what's going on inside your sausage as it cooks:

  • Under 120°F (48.9°C): The meat is still considered raw. Eat your sausage now and it'll taste more wet and mushy than juicy and bouncy. You also might get sick.
  • At 120°F: The casing begins to shrink, putting pressure on the meat inside. Simultaneously, the protein myosin begins to coagulate, forcing some liquid out of the muscle cells. In a well-salted sausage, this effect is minimal, as salt will have already largely dissolved this protein.
  • At 140°F (60°C): The casing and ground muscle and fat inside it are cooked through and opaque. At this stage, some shrinkage will have occurred, but expelled juices are still largely contained by the protein made up from the ground meat. In a well-made sausage, the casing should at this point be adding texture, but will not be essential for retaining juices.
  • Above 155°F (68.3°C): Proteins continue to contract, eventually squeezing out so much juice and fat that it can no longer be retained within the protein matrix. As when you wring out a sponge, fat and juice will be squeezed free of the meat and end up collecting under the surface of the skin. Congratulations. What you've got is a lump of dry meat sitting in a grease pool inside a sausage casing. We can do better than this.

Possible Solutions

The simplest possible solution is to cook the sausage over moderate heat on a grill. I find that by building a two-zone fire with all the coals piled under one side of the cooking grate, I can move my sausages back and forth from the cool to the hot side, carefully monitoring their internal temperatures with a probe thermometer and finagling it so that the insides come up to 150°F (66°C) just as the exteriors reach a perfect burnished, crisp, deep brown.

Using this method, you can get an evenly cooked sausage with plenty of smoky, grilled flavor.

It works, but it's not easy.

The second solution is much more foolproof, and the one that's recommended by many grilling experts: Poach them first. By covering the sausages in cold water on the stovetop and slowly bringing them up to 150°F in their water bath, you can get them cooked perfectly evenly from edge to edge. All that's required is a quick trip to the hot side of the grill, and you're done.

The problem? It's mainly one of flavor, convenience, and opportunity lost. You don't get much smoke flavor because the sausage doesn't spend much time on the actual grill. And if I'm grilling outside, I don't want to futz around indoors with a pan of simmering water. Similarly, if I'm going to take the time to poach a sausage, why wouldn't I use a liquid that will not only add flavor to the sausage, but benefit from having a sausage simmering in it as well?

What I wanted was a method that offered the full smoky flavor of a grilled sausage and the perfectly even, foolproof cooking of the poaching method, and made good use of the marriage of flavors between a sausage and its accompaniments.

Only one technique I know of offers this solution:

Simmered 'n' Grilled Sausages

Overhead view of sausages and hot dogs partially submerged in a disposable aluminum pan filled with a flavorful braising liquid.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

By placing the sausages in a disposable aluminum pan (or heavy-duty aluminum foil boat), along with moist, flavorful accompaniments—say, beer, whole grain mustard, sauerkraut, and thyme to go with these bratwurst—you can simmer the sausages directly over the grill, imbuing them with flavor from the ingredients in the pan as well as plenty of smoke from the grill.

Side-by-side disposable aluminum pans of sausages, one with peppers and onions, one with sauerkraut and mustard, cooking on the grill

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

I tried this technique with several varying parameters—cooking time, direct versus indirect heat, sear first and poach after versus poach first and sear after—and found that the best way to do it was to give the sausages their initial par-cook over indirect heat.

I pile up the coals on one side, place the trays on the hot side until the liquid is just barely simmering, transfer them to the cooler side, cover the grill with the vents open over the sausages (to encourage good convection current), then let them slow-cook until they reach close to their desired final temperature of 150°F.

This takes about 20 minutes or so—plenty of time for the smoke, condiment, and sausage flavors to all mingle.

An instant-read thermometer stuck in a pan of sausages on the grill

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

As a technique, it makes sense. After all, it's extremely similar to the slow-start, hot-finish technique I use for perfect prime rib, or when I grill a big fat steak. Slower cooking at the start means a more evenly cooked finished product.

A piece of sausage on a wooden cutting board, with labels pointing out a center that's juicy throughout and a crisp, charred skin

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Only after it's cooked do I transfer it to the hot side of the grill (which, by this point, is only moderately hot) to char the sausages and give them some snap and color. You may find that even with the par-poaching technique, a minimal amount of ripping will occur on the skin when you transfer it. That's okay. By this point, the interior of the sausage will already be cooked, and the protein matrix will be doing a fine job of holding the fat and other juices in place (provided you didn't overcook it).

This is a good thing, because you'll have already stuck it a few times with your instant-read thermometer (right?).

Two aluminum trays of sausages (one with sauerkraut and mustard, one with peppers and onions) on the grill

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

There are some other advantages to this method. I've found that once the sausages come to temperature, if you remove the lid of the grill and pile the sausages up as far away from the heat source as possible, they'll stay hot but won't continue to cook. That means that your sausages are ready when your guests are ready.

An aluminum pan with sauerkraut and mustard, with three cooked sausages and one uncooked sausage

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

All you've got to do is grab a sausage, throw it on the hot side, and in a matter of moments, it'll be ready to serve, along with a few scoops of its condiment. If you look carefully, you can even see the pink smoke ring around the exterior of that sausage, indicating that it's absorbed a good deal of flavor during its initial cook in the tray.

Just to confirm to my brain what my mouth was already telling it, I cooked up a few more sausages, this time weighing them before and after cooking to see how much fat and moisture were lost during the process.

A chart showing weight loss of sausages and hot dogs cooked using various methods and temperatures

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

As you can see, a poorly cooked sausage is dry for a reason: A full 37% of its weight is lost in the form of fat dripping out and water evaporating. Grilling to 150°F using the two-zone-fire shuffle method is much better, producing a sausage that loses only 21% of its weight. Slow-cooking in a pan and finishing with a hot grill is the best method. Not only does it incur only a 19% weight loss, it also gives the sausage an opportunity to pick up flavor.

Flavor Variations

Collage of four photos of sausages and hot dogs cooked with various flavoring agents

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

The liquids you cook your sausage in are limited only by availability and your imagination, but I tend to swing toward the classics.

Beer and Brats With Sauerkraut and Mustard

Close-up of grilled sausages in buns with sauerkraut and mustard

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Bratwurst simmered in sauerkraut and lager is a natural combination. (Make sure to save some beer to simmer yourself in while you wait for those sausages.) A few thyme sprigs and a scoop of good whole-grain mustard didn't RSVP to the party, but they're welcome to crash.

Hot Dogs With Sauerkraut

A grilled hot dog in a bun topped with sauerkraut and mustard

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

For regular hot dogs (natural-casing, please!), I prefer the straight-up, clean flavor of plain sauerkraut with a squirt of good spicy brown mustard. If you're from New York, you could also simmer the dogs in a jar of stewed onions. Sabrett makes a good street-cart-style jar.

Italian Sausage With Sweet and Sour Peppers

A sauté pan of onions and red and green peppers

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Okay, so this one takes a bit more work, but it's worth the effort! Onions and peppers cooked down in a sweet, vinegary glaze go perfectly with sweet or hot fennel-scented Italian sausage.

A disposable aluminum pan of Italian sausages, peppers, and onions on the grill

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

If you want to go 100% grilled, you can always grill the vegetables before adding them to the aluminum tray with the sugar, vinegar, and sausages.

Mexican Chorizo With Spicy Tomato Caper Sauce

A plate of Mexican chorizo sausage links topped with tomato sauce and cilantro

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Another slightly-more-work-but-worth-every-extra-minute recipe. Spicy and tart Mexican chorizo (not to be confused with dry-cured, raw Spanish chorizo) gets simmered in a tangy tomato sauce punched up with capers, olives, and a handful of cilantro.

Choosing Your Sausage

Since I've already spent way too many words on sausages, might as well make this whole guide comprehensive. Starting with a good sausage is as important as how it's cooked. Here's what to look for:

  • Choose fresh sausages over precooked. Precooked sausage generally means pre-over-cooked sausage, and there's no way to rescue a sausage that's been overcooked. Look for the words "fresh" on the packaging, and ensure that the sausages inside are still soft and raw-looking.
  • The exception is emulsified sausages. Emulsified sausages—sausages with a puréed, uniform filling, like hot dogs or German-style weisswurst or knockwurst—almost always come precooked, and this is fine. In these cases, look for sausages with natural casings.
  • Don't always go for the store-made stuff. Sausage-making is not as simple as grinding meat and shoving it in a casing. It requires a bit of technique. I can't count the number of times I've bought "house-made" sausages from reputable butchers only to find them under-seasoned or the fat smeared, with bland, dry results. When in doubt, there's no shame in using a mass-market, widely available brand like Johnsonville or Premio. You can at least be guaranteed that they are properly made.

Can't find good house-made sausages near you, and don't want to buy the mass-market stuff? Then consider making your own. Here are a half dozen easy recipes for you:

And with that, I promise you'll never hear me talk about sausages again.

May 2012

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