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Subject: 9/2 Int'l Bacon Day - 1 Date: Sun Sep 01 2024 03:27 pm
From: Dave Drum To: All

MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
 
      Title: Dirty Dave's Pork Butt "Bacon"
 Categories: Pork, Preserving
      Yield: 3 Pounds
 
      4 lb (to 5) boneless Pork Butt
      1 ga Water

MMMMM---------------------CURING INGREDIENTS--------------------------
      1 c  Pickling Salt
           +=AND=+
      3 oz Prague Powder #1
           +=OR=+
      3 oz Modern Cure
           +=ALTERNATIVELY=+
  1 1/4 c  Morton's TenderQuik can be
           - used place of pickling
           - salt AND Prague Powder or
           - Modern Cure
      3    California bay leaves
  1 1/4 c  Brown sugar
      3 cl Garlic
      3 tb Dirty Dave's All-purpose Rub
      1 tb Juniper berries; lightly
           - crushed
    1/2 tb Black peppercorns
 
  Equipment: 8 qt or larger stock pot, stoneware plate,
  weight(s), marinade/brine injector (opt)
  
  Make a bag (bouquet garni) of cheesecloth for the juniper
  berries, bay leaves, garlic and peppercorns. Put the
  gallon of water into the stock pot with dry ingredients
  and bring to a boil. Boil hard for about 10 minutes to
  insure all the flavour is obtained from the bouquet garni.
  
  Remove pot from heat, fish out the packet of bouquet garni
  and let cool to 38oF, which is your ideal temp. Add the
  butt and weigh down with a plate if necessary to ensure it
  remains submerged in the brine.
  
  You can use a cooks' syringe to inject strained curing
  brine into the heart of the meat to ensure complete
  curing. I just did a straight soak for 7 days. Suggested
  soak time is 5-7 days. If using multiple pieces of pork
  that might be resting on each other, it wouldn't hurt to
  flip them within the brine about halfway through the
  curing process to allow brine to reach all surface area of
  the meat.
  
  After the 5-7 days of soaking, remove the pork from the
  curing brine. At this point it can be rinsed/soaked in
  clean, cold water or cheap (Carlo Rossi) red wine to
  remove some of the saltiness of the brine. Depending on
  your taste/tolerance of salt content in cured meat, you
  may want to skip this step entirely or soak/ rinse for up
  to 2 hours (change the water a couple of times if going
  this length of time).
  
  Next, pat the loins dry with paper towel or dry cloth.
  Apply a thin coating of Dirty Dave's All-purpose Rub.
  (recipe follows)
  
  Prepare an indirect fire in your cooker, aiming for a temp
  of 225oF/105oC. Use the smokewood of your choice. Cherry,
  oak chunks, pecan, apple, or even grape vine trimmings.
  
  The target internal temperature of the cook will be
  determined largely by your finished intention for the pork
  butts. If you are looking for a breakfast bacon to be
  fried before eating, then an internal of 140-145oF/60-63oC
  will be ideal. For a finished fully-cooked product, keep
  cooking to internal of 155-160oF/68-70oC.
  
  The bacon can be fried up immediately or kept in the
  fridge with much the same shelf-life as other commercial
  cured bacons. It also freezes well, especially when
  pre-sliced with pieces of waxed paper placed between the
  slices.
  
  Recipe and MM Format by Dave Drum - 09 September 1997
  
  Uncle Dirty Dave's Kitchen
 
MMMMM

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