Cold smoked and dry cured pork loin
Cold smoked and dry cured pork loin
Prepared Schinkenspeck style pork loin. Smoky but mild almost sweet tasting. Definately a must do again. Sliced thinly it's great in a sandwich or as an appy with glass of your favourite grape juice.
Salt, 2.3%
Cure #2, .25%
Garlic powder, .5%
BP, .3%
Turbinado sugar, .5%
Juniper berries
Equilibrium cured in ziplock sack for 3 weeks. The absorption rate for sugar is as much as 10 times slower than salt, so if we want the sugar to work itself into the meat, the curing time has to be longer. Cold smoked for 4 days, about 10 hours each day. Hung in curing chamber, 11C, 80-85% RH for six weeks.
Salt, 2.3%
Cure #2, .25%
Garlic powder, .5%
BP, .3%
Turbinado sugar, .5%
Juniper berries
Equilibrium cured in ziplock sack for 3 weeks. The absorption rate for sugar is as much as 10 times slower than salt, so if we want the sugar to work itself into the meat, the curing time has to be longer. Cold smoked for 4 days, about 10 hours each day. Hung in curing chamber, 11C, 80-85% RH for six weeks.
No worries, I probably should not use acronyms anywaybolepa wrote:Woops... Thank you for educating me, redzed. I learned something new.
MatterOne, I used alder, but any mild wood such as apple would work. 40 hours of smoke is a long time and you don't want to use woods that produce a stronger smoke flavour. Pecan would work but I would smoke for a shorter period. But in the end, it comes down to personal taste, so it's a matter of experimenting until you get what you like.
Well, a curing chamber would be most ideal, but if you have a cool room, where the temp is less that 60F, you could probably hang it for a couple of weeks. If the loin had a nice layer of fat covering it would even be better. A cellar in the winter would be the best place if you don't have a chamber. And if you don't have chamber a cold smoked loin is better suited for hanging in warmer temps than one that is only cured. You buy a whole cheaply when they go on sale, so buy one and start experimenting!
That looks very good Chris! I read a few threads this morning at home at this one has been on mind mind to definitely try.
One hurdle is I have never tried equilibrium curing and will have to read up on the curing method before attempting.
Will there be a difference in finished product if I cure in brine?
One hurdle is I have never tried equilibrium curing and will have to read up on the curing method before attempting.
Will there be a difference in finished product if I cure in brine?
Ron
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There will be a difference in the amount of moisture which will come down to a matter of preference. However, since this is a dry cured product, dry curing is the more standard method. And equilibrium curing is really the way to go. For one thing you cannot over salt or under salt, all you need to do the first time is to use 2.25% salt and .25 curing salt which will amount to 2.5% salt. See how that suits you, and the next time you might want to adjust the salt up or down slightly. The beauty of it is that you can leave it curing in the fridge for 2 weeks or 4 weeks and smoke it when ever you have time.Bubba wrote:One hurdle is I have never tried equilibrium curing and will have to read up on the curing method before attempting.
Will there be a difference in finished product if I cure in brine?
I did not case the loin since the drying time and lack of mould don't need it. And German style schinkenspeck products are not cased. As BB stated, the smoke does inhibit mould, but after a couple of weeks it does start showing up. When that happens you can be vigilant and wipe it off with a cloth dipped in vinegar, or you can cold smoke it again for a few hours. Mine had a bit of of mould on it when I cut into into it and I wiped it off before vac sealing it.Rich wrote:Did you case this thing ? Does the smoke process inhibit mold ?
Excellent, thank you for the insight...ordered some stuff among which is Cure #2...should be here today or tomorrow...will begin the cure process at that time...may add some spicy paprika or cayenne, want a little "zip" to this one. other than that will probably copy your recipe if you don't mind.
Cheers,
Rich
Cheers,
Rich