Steve Maskery
Established Member
About a year ago I treated myself to a Smoking and Curing course with Steve Lamb from River Cottage. It was excellent.
I've done a bit a bit of smoking and I have about 5 chunks of wannabe prosciutto hanging up in the workshop in varying stages of air drying. The first should be ready by Christmas, I think.
I was talking about all this will my mate Charlie (who is 50% in on the prosciutto lark anyway) and he started talking about bacon. I have Lamb's book and sure enough there is a recipe for bacon. So we did it.
PDV salt, sugar, pepper, ground bay, juniper. Rub, refrigerate 24hrs, discard drainings, rub, repeat 10 days. Hang 10 days.
Today was the day.
I made some bread rolls and Charlie came over for breakfast.
The bacon is VERY firm indeed. Quite hard.
I had bought a bacon slicer, but it is a bit of a toy really, very flimsy and there was a strong smell of burning after only a few seconds of use
So it was hand carving instead. Well it looks like bacon. I would prefer it a bit fattier, but that is OK.
Into a cold pan and cooked.
The moment of truth:
And the verdict.
Oh dear. It wasn't very nice. It was too hard and it didn't have a very nice flavour. I think it was the juniper. I've used juniper in venison dishes and I didn't like it then, I should have remembered. Juniper is to be drunk and that's it, I think, in my book.
So what to do? Well I probably will try again, without the juniper. I was talking to the butcher in Morrison's and he says he makes his just by packing it in salt with the Cure, vacuum it, refrigerate 10 days and it's ready to eat. I've not used Cure, my understanding is that if you salt it properly it is not necessary.
I'm afraid it was a lot of work for a disappointing result. Sigh. But I probably will try again.
I've done a bit a bit of smoking and I have about 5 chunks of wannabe prosciutto hanging up in the workshop in varying stages of air drying. The first should be ready by Christmas, I think.
I was talking about all this will my mate Charlie (who is 50% in on the prosciutto lark anyway) and he started talking about bacon. I have Lamb's book and sure enough there is a recipe for bacon. So we did it.
PDV salt, sugar, pepper, ground bay, juniper. Rub, refrigerate 24hrs, discard drainings, rub, repeat 10 days. Hang 10 days.
Today was the day.
I made some bread rolls and Charlie came over for breakfast.
The bacon is VERY firm indeed. Quite hard.
I had bought a bacon slicer, but it is a bit of a toy really, very flimsy and there was a strong smell of burning after only a few seconds of use
So it was hand carving instead. Well it looks like bacon. I would prefer it a bit fattier, but that is OK.
Into a cold pan and cooked.
The moment of truth:
And the verdict.
Oh dear. It wasn't very nice. It was too hard and it didn't have a very nice flavour. I think it was the juniper. I've used juniper in venison dishes and I didn't like it then, I should have remembered. Juniper is to be drunk and that's it, I think, in my book.
So what to do? Well I probably will try again, without the juniper. I was talking to the butcher in Morrison's and he says he makes his just by packing it in salt with the Cure, vacuum it, refrigerate 10 days and it's ready to eat. I've not used Cure, my understanding is that if you salt it properly it is not necessary.
I'm afraid it was a lot of work for a disappointing result. Sigh. But I probably will try again.