Super Bowl-ed Over: Merguez Baguettes

RECIPE: Merguez Baguettes
Merguez Baguette

Merguez Baguette

I may not like chicken wings, but that doesn’t mean I don’t like it hot. I like hot dogs on a New York City corner, but at a party, they’re just too weeny. Instead, I serve the hottest, juiciest sausage in North Africa: Morocco’s fiery Merguez. A colonial acquisition to French cuisine, Merguez is made from lamb and spiced with anything from sumac to harissa. Above all, it is hot as the desert sun.

Merguez BaguetteI love my sausages grilled, smoky with char, and crisp. But because the Super Bowl is in the winter, I grill my sausages on my panini press. Then, instead of doughy hot dog buns, I stuff them into hearty, crusty baguette, lined with not one, but two sauces. The first is a fiery harissa mayonnaise. The second is a crème fraîche cooled with grated cucumber and shredded fresh mint. Baby spinach leaves and crumbled Terra chips finish off this gorgeous Merguez baguette.

If hot dogs are chihauhaus, then this Merguez baguette is a pit bull.

Merguez Baguettes
serves 2 to 4

Merguez BaguetteIngredients

  • 4 Merguez sausages, equaling 1 pound total
  • Drizzle of olive oil
  • ¼ cup mayonnaise
  • 1 tablespoon harissa
  • ½ cup crème fraîche
  • ¼ cup grated cucumber, from a cucumber that has been peeled and seeded
  • ¼ cup, or about 50 leaves, chiffonade of fresh mint
  • Salt and pepper
  • ½ cup baby spinach
  • ¼ cup Terra chip crumbs
  • 1 baguette, slit in half horizontally, but not all the way through, so it sits like a hot dog bun, then cut four pieces.

Procedure

Preheat your Panini press.
Rub the sausages with just a drizzle of olive oil, and sit them inside the Panini press for about 7-8 minutes on a medium-high setting, until cooked through and crisp.
Meanwhile, prepare the harissa mayonnaise by mixing the mayonnaise with the harissa. Set aside.
Prepare the cool crème fraîche by mixing the crème fraîche with the cucumber and mint, and season with salt and pepper.
Assemble the baguettes. First, smear the bottom half of each baguette with the harissa mayonnaise. Then, smear the top more liberally with the crème fraîche. Nestle in a handful of spinach all along the baguettes. Place one cooked Merguez sausage into each dressed quarter baguette, and top with some crushed Terra chips or other potato chips.

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Categories: Bread & Butter, Eat, Recipes, Sandwiches

3 Responses to Super Bowl-ed Over: Merguez Baguettes

  1. Anonymous says:

    It’s been ages since I had merguez, the sausage of choice in my family for cookout. Looks outstanding!

  2. Anonymous says:

    Oh boy, I’m back again and you’re making me hungry. Makes me wish I’d picked up some merguez this morning.

    Are you having your crepes today? I’m using this buckheat crepes recipe – don’t want to miss out on that good luck for the year!

  3. Anonymous says:

    So sorry, everyone, for my horrifying typo: I do know the difference between the desert sun and dessert sun.

    Tartelette–Thank you so much. I love your blog, and am so happy to have you here on French Rev. Merguez is an essential in my family as well; I’m thinking of redoing my grandmother’s Moroccan cigar recipe with it. Stay tuned for that one!

    Bricogirl–No, I didn’t have crepes! I was sadly on a plane all day. I hope you had enough for both of us.

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