When I was first married, one of my favorite breakfast sandwiches to eat on a car trip was an egg, cheese and sausage sandwich.
However, the last few years, I’ve cut sausage from my diet, since it’s hard not to wonder what’s in it. But since some of the best casserole and sandwich recipes, breakfast and otherwise, contain sausage, I’ve tried seasoning ground turkey to taste like sausage.
In the past I would add sage to my turkey and call it done, but to upgrade the sausage taste and enhance the flavor of my loose ground turkey, this combination of spices below is the ticket.
After combining this mixture and adding it to my ground turkey, I can add my “turkey sausage” to beans, eggs, or casseroles which call for cooked sausage.
For 1 pound of ground turkey add:
- 1 teaspoon brown sugar
- 3/4 teaspoon of salt
- 1/2 teaspoon pepper
- 3/4 teaspoon ground sage
- 3/4 teaspoon thyme
- 1/4 teaspoon marjoram
- 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes
- optional: pinch of ginger, clove of minced garlic
Flavor Ground Turkey to Taste Like Sausage
Ingredients
- For 1 pound of ground turkey:
- 1 teaspoon brown sugar
- 3/4 teaspoon of salt
- 1/2 teaspoon pepper
- 3/4 teaspoon ground sage
- 3/4 teaspoon thyme
- 1/4 teaspoon marjoram
- 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes
- optional:
- pinch of ginger
- clove of minced garlic
Instructions
- Add to ground turkey and mix well.
- Cook according to recipe.
This time I added it to my ground turkey and made a quick egg and “sausage” scramble for dinner.
It was scrumptious, and I served it with our favorite banana bread recipe:
Best Banana Bread EVER!!!
Click on the link to see my secret. 🙂
Enjoy!
I really like this idea of how to spice up ground turkey. Thanks for linking up this and your amazing looking cinnamon rolls to Wonderful Wed Blog Hop. Carrie, A Mother’s Shadow
I love this recipe!! We (my kids especially) eat a lot of breakfast sausage, but the pre-made turkey sausage I usually find has so many additives and preservatives. I’m going to try making my own this way. Thank you!
Yay! I want to try the patties too!
This is a great tip. I don’t like to spend a lot on meat and so if I can’t get sausage for a good price, we just don’t eat sausage. 🙂 But, I do get hungry for it sometimes when I’m out of it and this would be a perfect, less expensive way to get the taste! Thanks!
I tried this because I don’t really like the taste of ground turkey and it works! Delicious. I followed the recipe (w/o adding optional ginger and garlic), browned the turkey with some chopped onions and baked the turkey as a filling for Turkey Turnovers (simply buy ready made crescent rolls and roll out two, put in filling, fold over, and bake per instructions). Kids loved them. Slight sausage taste without being too rich or greasy.
Sounds yummy! Aren’t crescent rolls so multi purpose when it comes to baking!? 🙂
Great recipe! Thank you for sharing. Since you cook a lot of ground turkey, do you have recommendations for cooking it so it stays moist when you are just Browning it in the skillet for later use?
You could add a dab of water or broth. 🙂
So delicious! Thank you. I really like the combination of spices. I did it without the marjoram ( since I did not have any) and it was great. I will have to try it with the marjoram. I have a brother who does not eat pork, but now he can have sausage pizza!. Something new to do with ground turkey.
Anyone tried adding some liquid smoke to give it a smoked sausage flavor?
To make the sausage and egg scramble do I cook the eggs with the sausage or separate?
Hi there! I have never cooked raw turkey and raw eggs together at the same time, so I’m not sure how that might work and if everything would cook well enough to be safe without the eggs getting overcooked. I would cook them separately and then warm them up together. Some people like to cook the meat first, and drain all but a little fat, and then cook their eggs in the fat. 🙂