Warning!
This post contains some ugly woodwork.
Last summer I made a biltong box out of some odds and ends. I wasn't going to post this project because I'm not very accomplished at 'proper' woodwork, but Sean unwisely expressed an interest in another thread.
For those who don't know, biltong is a preserved, dried meat beloved of South Africans. Compare it to beef jerky at your peril (but it's rather like beef jerky
). I found instructions on how to make both the box and the biltong here.
My box has some slight variations from the traditional design. It is customary for a piece of pegboard (or similar) to shield the heat source (normally a light bulb) from any juices that may drip whilst allowing heat to rise. However, I devised a removable plinth for my heat source onto which was mounted a reflective shield; a piece of MDF covered in tin foil . By setting two slightly splayed dowels at the side of the heat source, I can raise or lower the shield, giving me a degree of temperature control. The springiness of the dowels holds the shield secure.
The end result looks like something you would step over on the pavement, but it tastes lovely and if you hang it where there is no damp (don't use a Tupperware box - DAMHIKT ) it will keep for ages.
Gill
This post contains some ugly woodwork.
Last summer I made a biltong box out of some odds and ends. I wasn't going to post this project because I'm not very accomplished at 'proper' woodwork, but Sean unwisely expressed an interest in another thread.
For those who don't know, biltong is a preserved, dried meat beloved of South Africans. Compare it to beef jerky at your peril (but it's rather like beef jerky
My box has some slight variations from the traditional design. It is customary for a piece of pegboard (or similar) to shield the heat source (normally a light bulb) from any juices that may drip whilst allowing heat to rise. However, I devised a removable plinth for my heat source onto which was mounted a reflective shield; a piece of MDF covered in tin foil . By setting two slightly splayed dowels at the side of the heat source, I can raise or lower the shield, giving me a degree of temperature control. The springiness of the dowels holds the shield secure.
The end result looks like something you would step over on the pavement, but it tastes lovely and if you hang it where there is no damp (don't use a Tupperware box - DAMHIKT ) it will keep for ages.
Gill