Felt like wasting time today so I smoked up 42lbs of bacon. First out was 30lbs done with apple and maple.
(http://i255.photobucket.com/albums/hh145/pitw75/Making%20food/100_6805.jpg)
Looks not bad.
(http://i255.photobucket.com/albums/hh145/pitw75/Making%20food/100_6806.jpg)
Gotta like when you see the brine has soaked all the way through.
(http://i255.photobucket.com/albums/hh145/pitw75/Making%20food/100_6807.jpg)
Pretty fair chunk of pork belly cured and smoked.
(http://i255.photobucket.com/albums/hh145/pitw75/Making%20food/100_6810.jpg)
First batch wrapped.
(http://i255.photobucket.com/albums/hh145/pitw75/Making%20food/100_6811.jpg)
Second batch had straight maple and one slab smoked extra.
(http://i255.photobucket.com/albums/hh145/pitw75/Making%20food/100_6815.jpg)
I also tried one piece with sugar added to the brine and I'll let you know if it is any good. :readthis:
That does look mighty tasty !!! :yoyo:
Jeb
How is that wasting time looks like the freezer is filling up fast :yoyo: :yoyo: :yoyo:
Man that looks good and ya even drink Canada Dry Ginger Ale why ya do it? :alscalls:
Quote from: Todd Rahm on December 16, 2010, 08:24:51 PM
Man that looks good and ya even drink Canada Dry Ginger Ale why ya do it? :alscalls:
Yeah Todd I felt the need for a change :biggrin:. In case anyone is interested we also put a can of that particular pop in the roaster when we cook a ham. It sweetens it some and really enhances the flavor.
Mmmmmmm That looks like some good Canadian bacon........... ! :biggrin:
Bobby's on facebook back there :alscalls:
Looks good for sure !!
Looks real good and probably tastes better. And I'll bet its cheaper than the $4.00 pound store bought stuff we got down here. :argh:
Quote from: FinsnFur on December 16, 2010, 09:48:31 PM
Bobby's on facebook back there :alscalls:
Nope, rolling pennies :biggrin:.
Semp I'll let you be the judge on price as I'll give you a pound if you drive up for it :innocentwhistle:. Your question made me chuckle as I asked the wife what it cost a pound and she :shrug:. She knows the price of everything but meat as she never has to go to to that section of a supermarket. :laf: :laf:.
Actually, that wasn't a fair comparison. That stuff we get in the stores is factory processed with gawd knows what kind of additives in it. :argh: I can guarantee yours is much better even if it costs $15 a pound.
By the time I drove up there and back I'd have $1,000 a pound in it. :laf:
mmmmm looks good Barry, see your still drinking your coke :yoyo:
Quote from: Semp on December 17, 2010, 05:30:40 AM
By the time I drove up there and back I'd have $1,000 a pound in it. :laf:
OK, OK, I'll even throw in the cooking of it and a room for a few days to make it cheaper :laf: :laf:. Funny you should mention the additives and such changing taste, when I took the boys fishing this fall I had Mandy pick me up some precut bacon in town to take along. When I cooked breakfast the first morning Donny takes a bite, makes a face and says, "Where'd this crap come from". :eyebrownod:
I would love to have a slab of that for breakfast, I also see someone has been by the Golden Arches was that to pickup a MacBurger? cc
Quote from: Carolina Coyote on December 17, 2010, 07:59:01 AM
I would love to have a slab of that for breakfast, I also see someone has been by the Golden Arches was that to pickup a MacBurger? cc
Same deal as I gave Semp Carl :laf: :laf:. The BigM cup came from my father who taught me the art of being cheap, he had nails in it when he gave it to me and I just started throwing pennies in it. :shrug: I do eat the sausage and egg mcmuffin but that is the only thing I get from that place.
Whew, the power of a picture. I've gotta have some bacon, and now.
To bad ya dont ship.......... I take trades......... :biggrin:
Slabs of bacon looks real good! Got any pictures of the smoking process?
Quote from: FOsteology on December 17, 2010, 06:36:04 PM
Slabs of bacon looks real good! Got any pictures of the smoking process?
Sorry Fos but due to the fact there are some unsavory types on the net who may report what they see on here to the authority's I never put up pics of me smoking :rolleye:. Also I'd hate for to have to worry about you hurting yourself from the rolling on the floor laughing at what you saw thingy too :biggrin:.
On a good note however the bacon turned out as good as any we have ever made and I will truthfully say I've never had better commercially done :nono:. Later we'll try the sugar added to the brine stuff for a comparison :shrug:.
Well, we tried the bacon with the sugar added to the brine and as near as I could tell the only difference was it was saltier :confused:. Do you suppose the sugar helped the uptake of salt? Everything else was the same so I don't think I'll do it that way again.
Wierd :confused: I'm wondering if it tasted saltier because your taste buds were fixin through the sweetness which made the salt seem distrupting.
Kinda like putting grape jelly on a hotdog...it's going to taste saltier :shrug:
Maybe you screwed up & put salt in thinking it was the sugar? :shrug:
Quote from: vvarmitr on December 21, 2010, 09:33:46 AM
Maybe you screwed up & put salt in thinking it was the sugar? :shrug:
Brown salt :confused:. :laf: :laf:
Its been a long time since I have been around curing Hams but if I remember correctly when Sugar curing don't use any salt at all just rub the Brown Sugar into the ham. cc
Quote from: Carolina Coyote on December 23, 2010, 09:35:56 AM
Its been a long time since I have been around curing Hams but if I remember correctly when Sugar curing don't use any salt at all just rub the Brown Sugar into the ham. cc
I was under the impression that the sugar would offset the harshness of salt :confused:. The hams are not out of the smoker and cooling down to be cut up into manageable roast sizes[5-8lbs]. There is 112 lbs of hams and two boys grinning from ear to ear :biggrin:.
I was a little boy when last involved with curing hams so only using sugar may not be correct as I got on the net looking for info and the sugar cure recipes called for salt also, from what I read the sugar is supposed to enhance the taste of the ham. The two boys grinning? ow about the old fart? cc
Quote from: Carolina Coyote on December 24, 2010, 08:40:37 AM
I was a little boy when last involved with curing hams so only using sugar may not be correct as I got on the net looking for info and the sugar cure recipes called for salt also, from what I read the sugar is supposed to enhance the taste of the ham. The two boys grinning? ow about the old fart? cc
Carl my father never cured a ham that I know of so I learned all this on my own and appreciate all the help I get from from people like you. The boys just love ;yes; ham and like our home done stuff better than any other, so yes they were grinning as they figured out how many times they could say,"Mom cook ham for supper". I as well was grinning as I like to see them interested enough to help and the fact that we don't have to depend on someone else for good food means the world to me :yoyo:.
I would be proud to have several big hams hanging right now as I sure love that stuff myself, nothing better and I'm sure all of you will enjoy it this winter. cc