I guess the American Indian equivalent would be moki-maani. It's dried meat ground up and mixed with fat and dried fruit. It's like an Indian power bar.
My Italian wife introduced me to hot Italian sausage.
Your moki-maani sounds like what was called pemmican by whites?
What language is moki-maani? I forgot your tribe.
I used to order a bratwurst and some other German sausage (knackwurst?) with sauerkraut and German potato salad at Hans Mueller's booth at the Texas State Fair, by the Esplanade reflecting pool with all the national flags. They sold good German and Danish beer, too.
Kuby's restaurant and store in Snider Plaza in Dallas (maybe technically in University Park?) has a lot of good sausage meals. Did not, alas, have the Germanic roast beef and red cabbage dinner I was hoping for. I was there once with member Bob Bettis, who picked up the tab.

Been in a few other times. It's good food of that sort, and they sell Lindt & Sprungli chocolate, inc. the orange-filled type that's hard to locate in Dallas. I believe they also process deer carcasses and probably make their own sausages.
And there's a splendid gun store in that shopping center, Jackson Armory. Not to be confused with the old Jackson Arms, which was nearby, near the beautiful SMU campus.
When I was younger, I sometimes made a meal of German sausage, cheese, bread, and beer.
I'm not German by descent (British) but Texas has a large Germanic population and some Czechs. They sell a lot of
wurst, and of course, some shops pun that their
wurst is the best. I know that Fredericksburg is a population center for those settlers. I'd like to go there sometime.
I used to sometimes eat the round breakfast sausages, but not so much now. Read that they aren't good for you. I think they still come with IHOP's Rooty, Tooty, Fresh and Fruity breakfast, one of America's best meal values.
Oh: this is a good place to give Grey Poupon country Dijon mustard a free plug. I like it on sausage and even use it on salmon.