Homemade cooking feels easy with Pan-Fried Sicilian Pork Sausage with Fennel, using only three ingredients to create tender pork, crisp edges, and a mild fennel aroma.

Sausage was one of the meats I loved most while growing up. I still enjoy it, but these days I’m much more selective and try to make my own homemade sausage whenever I can.
When you prepare it yourself, you know exactly what goes into it, you choose the cuts of meat, and you decide how lean or rich you want it. The flavour is completely different from anything you find in a packet.
I’ve already shared my recipe and tutorial for making Sicilian pork sausage with fennel, and today I want to show you one of the many ways we turn it into a simple meal at home.

Besides grilling or cooking it on the barbecue, this is probably the quickest method. It’s also how my family cooks sausage in winter, when we bring everything indoors and pan fry it instead.
We simmer the sausage in water first, then let it fry in its own fat before deglazing the pan with wine. It comes together easily and works well on busy evenings.
I usually serve it with chips or baked potatoes. Enjoy!
Why We Love This Sicilian Sausage
- Pairs easily with potatoes, greens, or salad for a complete plate without extra planning.
- Brings a warm, savoury comfort to the table without needing a long list of ingredients.
- Works well for casual dinners where you want something tasty with minimal work.
Key Ingredients for Sicilian Sausage with Fennel
Sicilian Fennel Pork Sausage
Choose sausage with a visible balance of lean meat and fat, as this gives you a tender bite and enough rendered fat for the final frying stage. A well-seasoned sausage delivers the fuller, slightly sweet fennel note that defines this dish.
White Wine
Reduces in the final stage and lifts flavour from the pan while helping the surface brown. A dry white wine works best because it keeps the glaze clean and lets the sausage stand out. The reduction adds a gentle acidity that balances the richness of the pork.
Find the complete list with measurements in the recipe card below.
How to Make Pan-Fried Sicilian Sausage with Fennel
Step 1: Roll the sausage and place it in a frying pan.
Step 2: Add enough water to cover about ¾ of the sausage and set the pan over medium heat. Cook, turning the sausage occasionally, until the water has completely evaporated and the sausage is cooked through. As it cooks, prick the fatty pockets with a skewer to release some of the fat. Be careful, as the fat may splatter.
Step 3: When the water has evaporated, increase the heat and add the white wine. Fry the sausage on both sides until the wine has reduced completely and the sausage is nicely browned.

Step 4: Serve warm with baked potatoes.

Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. You can cook individual links the same way. Keep the simmer gentle so the links stay intact and finish with the wine reduction as written.
Add thin onion slices or small pieces of pepper during the frying stage. They soften in the rendered fat and take on the flavour of the sausage without slowing the evaporation needed for browning. Keep the pieces small, so they cook at the same pace as the reduction.
Pair it with baked potatoes, chips, or a simple green salad to balance the richness. Sautéed greens work well too, and crusty bread helps pick up the glaze from the pan.
Yes, but use a mild broth. Stronger broths may compete with the fennel and pork flavour. A light broth adds a gentle savoury base, but make sure the level stays the same as the water in the original method, so the sausage cooks evenly before the frying stage.
Extra Help from the Kitchen
Choose a Pan That Fits the Coil – Match the pan size to the sausage so the coil stays intact and cooks evenly during the simmering stage.
Start with Cold Water – Heat the sausage gradually from cold to prevent splitting and keep the texture firm while it cooks through.
Keep the Lid Nearby – Cover the pan loosely for a moment if the simmer becomes too active. This manages splatters without slowing evaporation.
Reduce the Wine Steadily – Lower the heat slightly as the wine thickens to avoid scorching and create a cleaner glaze on the sausage.
Slice Only at the Table – Cut the sausage after serving so it retains moisture and keeps its texture from the pan to the plate.
Variations and Twists
Add Onions – Add thin onion slices during the final fry so they soften in the rendered fat and take on the wine reduction.
Include Peppers – Add small strips of pepper once the water evaporates. The pieces soften quickly in the hot fat and add gentle sweetness that works well with the fennel in the sausage.
Use Red Wine – Replace the white wine with red wine for a deeper, slightly darker glaze. Red wine reduces a bit thicker and adds a rounder finish to the pan juices.
Add a Lemon–Green Salad – Prepare a simple green salad with lemon and olive oil and serve it on the side. The acidity balances the richness of the sausage.
Storage and Shelf Life
Store cooked sausage in an airtight container in the fridge for 2–3 days. Keep it on the top shelf or in the meat drawer so the temperature stays steady.
For longer storage, freeze the sausage in a sealed container or freezer bag for up to 2 months.
Thaw frozen sausage in the fridge overnight. Reheat it in a covered pan over low heat with a splash of water to keep it tender. Avoid high heat because the sausage may dry out or brown too quickly before warming through.

Pan-Fried Sicilian Pork Sausage with Fennel Recipe
Homemade cooking feels easy with Pan-Fried Sicilian Pork Sausage with Fennel, using only three ingredients to create tender pork, crisp edges, and a mild fennel aroma.
Ingredients
- 500 g – 1.1 lbs Sicilian fennel pork sausage
- 80 ml – ⅓ cup white wine
- Water – as needed
Instructions
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Roll the sausage and place it in a frying pan.
-
Add enough water to cover about ¾ of the sausage and set the pan over medium heat. Cook, turning the sausage occasionally, until the water has completely evaporated and the sausage is cooked through. As it cooks, prick the fatty pockets with a skewer to release some of the fat. Be careful, as the fat may splatter.
-
When the water has evaporated, increase the heat and add the white wine. Fry the sausage on both sides until the wine has reduced completely and the sausage is nicely browned.
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Serve warm with baked potatoes.
















My mouth is watering. I can’t even begin to imagine how amazing that must taste. The smell alone would drive me insane. It looks absolutely delicious.
It’s hard to imagine a more satisfying meal than this one. A beautiful homemade pork sausage and perfectly roasted potatoes. Heaven!