Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
first time bacon making
Collapse
X
-
One thing I am curious about; the grain on the pork belly. The recipe calls for slicing across the grain. Unlike a lot of cuts seeing the grain in pork belly is tough. Is across the grain like it is done commercially or is it the opposite? My pork belly looks like I would slice it on the "long" side to duplicate store bought bacon. Is that correct?
Leave a comment:
-
One final question for our friend Down Under: What hardwood are native that you can use for smoking?
Leave a comment:
-
Yes, indeed. Several times I stayed at a small beach town about 45 minutes North. Can't remember the name of it but I was staying at a hotel called Peppers on Sea. I was crook from bad food in Taipei. Went to a doctor there, gave me some pills but told me to go down to the street to the local rugby club and have a couple glasses of beer to settle my insides. It was a miracle cure!Last edited by wmsjensen; January 23, 2021, 01:36 PM.
Leave a comment:
-
I've tried making bacon a few times dry brining using Meathead's recipe. I even bought a small scale to weigh out the ingredients exactly. It comes out a little tough and chewy. What am I doing wrong?
- Likes 1
Leave a comment:
-
It will be just fine. You probably will be tweaking for a while anyway, so this is one attempt.
- Likes 2
Leave a comment:
-
I've lost count the amount of times that I've done bacon and I'm still tweaking the ratio's a little for perfection.
Be confident that by making your own bacon you will never buy it again, the addiction begins haha.
My two cents if your hot smoking is to give it plenty of smoke as you bring it up to 150 deg, but that's how I like it.
The beauty of it is that you can make it taste exactly how you want, just give it a crack mate, you won't be sorry
- Likes 2
Leave a comment:
-
AS JoeSousa says, it might come out a bit salty, depending on your palate. That said, everyone in my family found the standard cure that Meathead published to be light on salt and I have amped it up a bit in my own versions of the cure. Sugar, on the other hand, really doesn't penetrate more a couple millimeters into the meat (molecules are too big) and so you're not going to experience "more sugar" in my opinion. Rinse it off well before you smoke, shouldn't be an issue on the sugar front. Same thing with the pepper. If you want pepper bacon, the best approach is to do a pepper rub after the cure and smoke it like that.
Leave a comment:
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Leave a comment: