As a guide
5000 mg of sodium (not just salt)
1000 mg of potassium, in the form of potassium chloride or potassium sulfate
300 mg of magnesium, preferably in the form of magnesium citrate
All these electrolytes should be preferably consumed in addition from what you get from your food.
Most of us will not reach these suggested totals with food alone, but there are several ways to ingest extra electrolytes:
Drink 1 or 2 cups of bouillon or broth daily
Add salt and/or salt substitute to your food
Take a multivitamin containing magnesium and/or potassium
Add a teaspoon of salt and/or salt substitute to a large glass of water and drink it
This advice comes from a ketogenic diet site
https://www.reddit.com/r/ketogains/
You can find sausages here that contain as little as 35% meat. And plenty of their sort too. No need asking what the rest might be.
Probably lips and aholes
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When I slow roast my pork I skim off the fat ( drippings) and use instead of butter on bread.
Also the left over juices and fat in the pan I use this way. In room temperature ( 78 F) it melts.......
......Sometimes I render fat by slow boiling pork fat with the skin, and add finely chopped pork crackling, salt and caraway seeds. Again, it melts in room temperature.....
.....Pork fat is maybe not so healthy but so delicious!
Sausages in UK are made from a raw meat/ rusks and spices mixture. The sausages in the rest of the Wirld are already cooked, type Frankfurters.
This difference makes a discussion difficult.
In sausages such as the old (pre 1950s) hotdogs, yes. But technically those are meat (although with few exceptions, not a meat I'd care to eat. They're still found in "head cheese." I think y'all call it "scouse." None of them contain any carbs though. I have to be especially careful to get products that are Gluten Free so that prohibits most grains from the start.
Yeah, it is delicious. However 78f is warmer than "room temp." Official "room temperature" is 72f. (yeah, I know the definition www.miriam-webster.com/medical/roomtemperature gives a range of from 59f to 77f but for study and experimental purposes we are taught 72f even) Like I said, it's not far from the melting point.
Not all of our sausages are pre-cooked; although the hotdogs and smokes sausages are. Boudin, Italian sausages, alligator/crawfish sausages, etc. are usually raw as are bratwurst.
78 is what my worn joints and neck like so that is what I have the heating (Sweden, UK) and AC ( here) set on....
....Bratwurst is cooked, the German original one at least.
Man, I would love to taste the aligator and crawfish sausages!......
.....In Sweden pre EU "meat" was legally all soft tissue from the animal. I do not know if the EU regs are different.
I used to know a guy that owned a delicatessen and sausage factory in Sweden. His (cooked) sausages contained about 90% muscle meat and fat. Fatty cuts. Delicious, but very expensive .
I make my own sausages, of the unsmoked sort. Base receipe is 2/3 lean meat, 1/3 fat. Then I add spices, maybe apple, or leeks.
One, my favourite, is made from pork and chicken lean meat, pork fat, white wine, and spices.
It is the Czech Vinná Klobása.
I do not add any fillers like flour or rusks. You could eat those! 100 % Gluten Free!
To be honest most of our sausage and our taste in sausage is influence more by eastern central and Europe than the UK (we had loads of Polish, and German immigrants in the early years, and Italians later) The Cajun boudin would be the nod to French influence. Our small(ish) breakfast links would be a not to the chipolatas I had in the UK although I believe even they are of French origin?
Our favorite wood for smoking (hickory) would be an entirely American thing though. Or possibly the North American continent?
Same names but slightly different foods! That is one of the joys moving to different countries like I have done, years of surprises!
I am personally slightly affected by Celiac disease. Lowest grade. Highly Lactose intolerant though. But proper matured cheese is ok.
Where in Florida can you buy the Gator/crawfish sausages?
I am going to the Miami / Ft Laud. area soon, to have 4 lovely days of medical exams done. Invasive and non invasive.
Plus shopping ( Bass Pro, IKEA, West Marine, Lou's Police Supply plus some for the wife. Shoes and crap she does not really need.
Not sure about chemical bleaching, but if it is solid in room temperature then it has been chemically altered, hydrogenated.
Any additionsl process will not alter the shelf life of your pemmican. The surface can go rancid after a while, but the fat acts as a barrier for oxygen and prevents spoiling.
Hence the used of fat to preserve food ( the ancient technique of 'potting' meats, shrimp, duck and so on)
I'm looking for some advice on what food to carry for a low carb diet when bushcraft /camping. Most boil in the bag or dehydrated meals one can buy from camping shops are based on pasta, rice or oats, so are not an option for someone on a low carb diet.
Many thanks.