Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
I did not know there were so many different types of sherry wine. The one I am familiar with is the dark sweetened sherry. I don't know which one would be best for inclusion when making salami. Fino, Manzanilla, Amontillado, Oloroso, or a sweetened sherry? I'm thinking the bold oloroso, but that is just a guess. Any assistance choosing is appreciated. Thanks.
Re: Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
That's a tough question because sherry is usually not used in salami making. It's a high alcohol type of wine (esp. olorosso) which may act as an antimicrobial and destroy beneficial bacteria. It's also a low acid wine and traditionally wine was added to lower the pH. A yound aromatic white works well, and a young fruit forward red usually also has acidity and flavour. I'm curious why are set on sherry?
Re: Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
Thank you for the reply redzed. I looked online and found this:
Thus my search for Sherry wine....
https://www.columbuscraftmeats.com/prod ... i/cresponeInspired by a recipe from the mountainous Brianza region in Northern Italy, COLUMBUS® Crespone Salami from well-trimmed, premium cuts of antibiotic-free pork. We season them with pepper, garlic and sherry wine, then stuff the pork into natural casing and slow age it for a particularly tender texture and ‘country style’ taste. Varieties slow aged at least 26 days.
Thus my search for Sherry wine....
Re: Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
And thank you for the pointers on high acidity wines. In a lot of my salamis I have been using Chianti which is a high acid wine made from Sangiovese Grapes.
Re: Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
Might work if you dose in small amounts. And with all due respect to Columbus products, (I liked most of their stuff), this crespone is a bit far fetched and far from the original. Sherry is probably unheard of in northern Italy . The only people that I know who drink sherry are Brits who sit by the fireplace and talk only about the weather.
Re: Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
I bought 225lbs of Sangio grapes this fall. Good Brix and the wine is just about finished the malolactic fermentation. Will be transferring it to a barrel next week. Grapes came from a high production grower, but the numbers are good and it has potential. Might blend it with 15% merlot.
Re: Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
Ah...I do like your reasoning. Since I would like to recreate an original version, which wine would you recommend?redzed wrote: ↑Sun Jan 03, 2021 07:49Might work if you dose in small amounts. And with all due respect to Columbus products, (I liked most of their stuff), this crespone is a bit far fetched and far from the original. Sherry is probably unheard of in northern Italy . The only people that I know who drink sherry are Brits who sit by the fireplace and talk only about the weather.
Also, how similar is Crespone to Milano? Is the only difference the casing it is put in?
Re: Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
I did a lot of searching for an authentic recipe and settled on Ruhlman and Polcyn's (with amendments).
viewtopic.php?f=5&t=8514&hilit=crespone
Re: Which style Sherry wine for making salami?
Thank you redzed.