• had friend give me a pork belly. was wondering which method is better brining or rub for flavor? I never did bacon before want too try something new.


  • I just completed curing two pork bellies into bacon using the injection method described here by Walton’s. You mix Walton’s Maple flavored bacon cure, bacon enhancer, and water. Inject into the bellies and then cover the bellies overnight with a diluted solution of the cure. Next morning, smoke for four hours using apple wood. Let the bellies bloom for an hour or two, then freeze. When almost frozen I sliced them up with my food slicer, packaged into vacuum bags, labeled, and back to the freezer. My recovery of finished bacon was about 77% of the green weight of the two bellies.
    As compared to rubbing the pork with a dry rub, injection is days faster. Dry rub requires refrigeration of the bellies for five or six days, turning the pork daily. The bacon produced by injection–do the math to get the amount of cure and water correct for the weight of your pork–is excellent. It has a mild maple smoked flavor that my family likes much better than the sometimes salty taste of rubbed bacon.
    The biggest factor, especially this time of year, is that my wife will tolerate my take-over of part of her refrigerator for a day, but if I loaded two meat lugs full of pork bellies in to the refer for a week, I’d hear about it. Can’t screw up her Holiday cooking plans. Just a word to the wise; happy wife, happy life.
    Greg

  • Team Blue Admin Walton's Employee Power User Kansas Dry Cured Sausage

    bromeat what gerygaub says is true, injection is absolutely faster though it requires an injector where rubbing it only requires the cure and a meat lug (or another container).

    Bacon Taste Booster is something that is made to help fight off rancidity in the cooler and to help impart the old world taste with modern methods, like injecting. Now, it is most effective when you are tumbling as generally after tumbling you go right to the smoker instead of holding overnight but it can be used when injecting and holding overnight. So you might want to consider adding some if you inject, I add it when I inject and I do think that it adds something nice to the bacon!

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Meatgistics is brought to you by Walton's (waltons.com). Meatgistics is a community site, knowledgebase, forum, blog, learning center, and a sharing site. You can find help and ask questions about anything related to meat processing, smoking and grilling meats, plus a whole lot more. Join Austin & Jon from Walton's and sign up for our Meatgistics community today. We have created Meagistics University, where we broke down meat processing into different categories and then broke it down into a class like structure. The introductory classes are 10s, the intermediate are 20s, and advanced are 30s.

About Walton's

Walton's Inc. sells meat processing equipment and supplies, including all of the Seasoning, Equipment, Supplies, Packaging, and Casings needed to make almost any type of sausage. Walton's sells to the commercial customer with a focus on the small to medium-sized processing plants or butcher shops, and directly to the hunter or processor who makes their own product at home. Whether you are a commercial or retail customer of Walton's you will be receiving the exact same seasoning and supplies, we do not have a different "line" for commercial and retail customers so that everyone can make the best sausage or jerky possible!

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