Tusiaczek pastrami - by StefanS
Tusiaczek pastrami - by StefanS
My polish friend made this recipe to get close as possible to famous Katz Delicatessen pastrami.
Original recipe has been posted on polish WD. Few days ago, using his recipe I have made whole brisket in his way. - Results - outstanding..
so it is -
EQ curing in vac pouches with addition of 22 g/kg sea salt, plus 2 g/kg cure #1, Refrigerator temperature and 7-10 days.
Eventually repacking with addition some spices like granulated garlic, BP, dried onion (it is your own preferences). I have made 2 pieces with, BP, garlic, little soy sauce. another 2 pieces without any addition. Vac pouches i kept for 26 hours at 55*C(131F) for sous vide method.
After that time - pieces went to ice cold water to completely cool down. Unpacking them and dry with paper towel. At this moment it is perfect time to make own taste preferences. I have used
as glazing mix 1 part of molasses and 1 part of soy sauce plus a few drops of liquid smoke and few drops of Tabasco sauce. It is glazing mix that i have put over dried and cooled down meat with brush.
Then special rub - for 1 kg of meat..
20 g of black pepper(multicolored pepper is better)
10 g of coriander
5 g of granulated garlic
3 g of yellow mustard seeds
5 g of chopped dried onions
3 g of smoked paprika
3 g of dried Coleman mustard
coarse grind then added 100 g of Turbinado Sugar
Spices rubbed over meat pieces to make nice crust.
Pieces of meat moved to oven on crates and baked at 250F for around 1 hour 20 min.
It is time consuming but worth that effort
in oven -
Hot - directly from oven (better than Katz Delicatessen)
Cold - also very good to sandwiches..(or as snack)
Original recipe has been posted on polish WD. Few days ago, using his recipe I have made whole brisket in his way. - Results - outstanding..
so it is -
EQ curing in vac pouches with addition of 22 g/kg sea salt, plus 2 g/kg cure #1, Refrigerator temperature and 7-10 days.
Eventually repacking with addition some spices like granulated garlic, BP, dried onion (it is your own preferences). I have made 2 pieces with, BP, garlic, little soy sauce. another 2 pieces without any addition. Vac pouches i kept for 26 hours at 55*C(131F) for sous vide method.
After that time - pieces went to ice cold water to completely cool down. Unpacking them and dry with paper towel. At this moment it is perfect time to make own taste preferences. I have used
as glazing mix 1 part of molasses and 1 part of soy sauce plus a few drops of liquid smoke and few drops of Tabasco sauce. It is glazing mix that i have put over dried and cooled down meat with brush.
Then special rub - for 1 kg of meat..
20 g of black pepper(multicolored pepper is better)
10 g of coriander
5 g of granulated garlic
3 g of yellow mustard seeds
5 g of chopped dried onions
3 g of smoked paprika
3 g of dried Coleman mustard
coarse grind then added 100 g of Turbinado Sugar
Spices rubbed over meat pieces to make nice crust.
Pieces of meat moved to oven on crates and baked at 250F for around 1 hour 20 min.
It is time consuming but worth that effort
in oven -
Hot - directly from oven (better than Katz Delicatessen)
Cold - also very good to sandwiches..(or as snack)
- Butterbean
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- Location: South Georgia
I have a similar routine for pastrami, but I use about double the amount of paprika, and I use smoked paprika rather than plain. Seems to add enough smoke flavor to cover that aspect of the flavor profile. Before serving, I lay the pile of slices in a large skillet with a tablespoon or two of water and steam it for 10 or 15 minutes until the added water boils off, flipping the pile around so most of the slices hit the bottom of the pan at some point. That softens up the fat a bit and adds a little crunchy dryness that for me sets the texture nicely.
The "Montreal Smoked Meat" served in Jewish delis in that city is also smoked and steamed just before serving. My daughter lived in Montreal for several years and having a thick sandwich with slices of fat brisket on rye with a large pickle was always a highlight of my visit to that city. The most famous is Schwartz's where there are always long lineups and it's crazy busy inside. Best is to get a seat at the counter and watch as the staff keeps bringing out an endless supply of steaming hot briskets, slicing them and stacking on bread.StefanS wrote:and they steam it before serving too ..Bob K wrote:owever Katz's also smokes their Pastrami.
Re: Tusiaczek pastrami - by StefanS
Once again, fantastic recipe and excellent flavour.
JjNUrK
Re: Tusiaczek pastrami - by StefanS
Smacznego..
Re: Tusiaczek pastrami - by StefanS
Joe I wish I could have had one of those sandwiches! Looks delicious and I haven't had one of those in four years! I see many hobbyists make "pastrami" with all kind of cuts, but nothing compares to the original, made with beef brisket with a decent amount of fat.