Deepwoodsbutcher and cdavis it is probably my favorite bacon I have made. Sweetness from maple, a little raspberry flavor up front, jalapeño flavor but no heat. I also make a pretty mean apple pie bacon which was my favorite before the black raspberry jalapeño maple bacon.
Best posts made by fallis10
-
RE: Black Raspberry Maple Jalepeno Bacon
-
RE: Apple sausage mixing?
I make a good apple cinnamon bratwurst that is a base brat recipe with extra pie spice and cinnamon with finely diced Granny Smith apples that is super delicious. I have also done that style with a little bourbon mixed in with it instead of just water. It’s fantastic
-
RE: Easter Ham Brine
calldoctoday it is fennel seed like you would put in Italian sausage, but you toast the seeds in a hot skillet with no oil, just to open them up and the flavor profile becomes sort of fruity. It is something I once tried on cold smoked salmon for the brine and knew I had to do it on ham too. For a 12 pound ham, I use about a tablespoon of whole fennel seed.
-
RE: Basic bacon rundown please
Forgot the jalapeño part! After it is smoked, do this:
Mash the jalapeños with a little bit (smallest amount as needed) in a mortar and pestle until you have a light paste. You will wear disposable gloves to rub the green paste thinly onto the smoked bellies and the refrigerate them for 6-12 hours until cold before slicing them into bacon. Do not brine with pepper slices in the mixture. It tosses your alkalinity out the window and can allow bacteria to prosper in the brine mixture- brining removes and prevents bacteria growth. Don’t waste product and 7 days of waiting by doing any method with peppers in the brine. -
RE: Lox or cold smoked salmon
Dave in AZ Took me a while to find the recipe. It is for a 3# side of salmon
1 gallon water
24 grams sea salt
15 grams maple sugar (can use brown sugar if you like)
4 grams of cure salt #1
The spices are to taste. I don’t measure them honestly. Maybe like a 1/2 cup black peppercorns, 1/4 cup red juniper berries, a couple crushed cinnamon sticks, 1/4 cup fennel seeds, 1/4 cup mustard seed, a handful of whole crushed nutmeg. I crush the peppercorn and nutmeg at separate times in a tea towel. Roast the spices in order of hardiness, with fennel and mustard seed last. Dry skillet, 30-60 second toast for each spice. Keep them moving in the skillet so nothing burns. Boil everything in the water then add ice to get up to the required amount of brine solution. A gallon of water is about 8 pounds or so, so I zero my scale with a brining bucket (or large food safe container) on it then add the brine solution and stir in ice until you have a gallon of water and it reaches about 65-68F. Do not add fish to hot brine. I cure my salmon for 3 days or until the fish becomes pretty rigid. I then soak the salmon for 4-6 hours in distilled water to draw out excess salt then cold smoke. -
RE: Basic bacon rundown please
http://www.diggingdogfarm.com/page2.html
Use this site for the cure ratio. You will need a reliable scale for this. It all depends on weight. Make sure you zero the scale to account for the weight of bowls or containers you are using so it doesn’t throw off the meat:ingredients ratios.
Buy cure salt #1, and for a single belly, the smallest package you can buy will likely be enough. I buy 10 pound buckets, and make bacon 2-3 times per month, and a bucket lasts me over a year.
Mix up the brine formula, put that plus the belly into food safe bags (I cut my belly in half “hamburger style” so I can still get full slices when I’m done, and I use Ziploc 2 gallon bags- 1 half of the belly in each bags).
This will cure for 7 days in the fridge. Suggest using a cookie sheet under the bags in case they leak. You can always wrap the bags up tightly in plastic wrap to help with this as well. Every day, just pick a time that works for you so it is consistent, you want to flip the bellies over. This allows even brining and also makes you feel involved and important while the brine does its thing!
After 7 days, remove the bellies, rinse them very well under cold water to remove excess salt (some people soak them for a few hours, but I never have and my bacon is fantastic).
Here is the real divider amongst the bacon-making community: smoking. Some hot smoke and some cold smoke. Either way it is great. You just do you here and see which method you like more. Being winter, it is a great time to try cold smoking. If you have an offset smoker, lighting a fire in the smoke box is a bad idea. Buy an A-Maze-In Smoke Tub or maze tray (tray holds more pellets). Cold smoke for 4-6 hours based on flavor preference.
I hot smoke at 225-250 for 4 hours. Either way, still fry it or bake it when ready to eat. If you’re great with a knife, cut the skinniest slices you can. A slicing knife works better than a regular kitchen knife does. Eventually buy a decent deli slicer. Keep an eye on Facebook market place in areas where there are hunters. Some areas are better than others to search for this stuff.
So cure 7 days, flipping it. Smoke it. Cut it. Cook it. Eat it. Repeat it. -
RE: Jalapeño Popper brats from Livestream
I’ve made jalapeño popper sausages from scratch seasonings. Ground 5# of bacon (smoked but not fried or baked) with 15# of pork trim and shoulder. Grinding them together really blends the bacon flavor pretty evenly. I used some jalapeño powder to avoid the pepper crunch and added that to my base bratwurst seasoning blend. Froze a block of cream cheese and hand mixed the cubes (1/4” cubes) into the seasoned meat mixture. Also added a little Sure Cure to the blend. It was super delicious!
-
RE: Eggnog Bratwurst
glen it is truly amazing. I cooked up 4 links for associates to try. Have to have special protocols in place to give out samples to customers right now so they did not try it first. I just explained how the flavor profiles share so many similarities and they were hooked.
-
RE: Cold Phosphate
I would not use both. I will say that I am not saying this out of scientific research, but just in that both additions will help retain moisture levels and using both might end up being sort of overkill. Sure gel helps in the blending of proteins and lipids for a smoother final product. It all depends on your desired final product though. I personally don’t like any smear on my fat pieces that are tossed in. Some people want a commercialized and super emulsified product. To me, bologna should be smooth but not paste-like such as in hotdogs.
-
RE: Jalapeño Popper brats from Livestream
GWG8541 I smoked them at a very low temp (150ish?) for about two hours with cherry wood chunks. It gave a little more bacon smokiness and also helped set the casing to the sausage inside. I was aiming to also get a little more moisture level to account for the pepper juice in a fried popper but it didn’t come out in that regards. Still was a great addition to smoke them though!
Latest posts made by fallis10
-
RE: Black Raspberry Maple Jalepeno Bacon
Deepwoodsbutcher and cdavis it is probably my favorite bacon I have made. Sweetness from maple, a little raspberry flavor up front, jalapeño flavor but no heat. I also make a pretty mean apple pie bacon which was my favorite before the black raspberry jalapeño maple bacon.
-
RE: Bacon packaging plastic
Deepwoodsbutcher the cutting boards would get expensive fast. I’ll likely have about 60 packages when I’m done sealing it all. I could always grab some foam trays from the store I’m cutting at today….
-
RE: Bacon packaging plastic
processhead not sure yet. It is 22 pounds divided amongst 3 families so hopefully it’s not something like “8 slices per pack please” because I’ll go insane. I planned on shingling it like I do for myself when I do just a 10 pound belly and other peoples’ wants aren’t involved. Reaching into a vac bag to shingle a thousand slices of bacon seems like something I don’t want to do. The bacon board was so I could quickly lay it out on the board and simply slide the bacon into the bag. Much easier that way I would have thought.
-
Bacon packaging plastic
I’m about to vacuum seal 22 pounds of bacon I cured. I realized that the plastic sheets that store bought bacon is laid on would be great to use so I can store the vac packed packs much easier. Does anybody know where to get “bacon plastic” or what it is actually called?
-
Black Raspberry Maple Jalepeno Bacon
Just made 22 pounds of bacon from a hog that went to slaughter in November. Just prepped the black raspberry maple jalepeno rub for when it comes out of the smoker. This made me start pondering though: What other exotic flavors have you guys tried? Open to trying any flavor that I haven’t already made!
-
RE: Updates coming to User Recipes
The whole recipe book would only be 20 recipes?
-
RE: Lox or cold smoked salmon
All Things BBQ has a great cold smoked salmon video on YouTube. Just watched it and I might try that this week. Just took a side of salmon out of my chest freezer to smoke on Friday.
-
RE: Lox or cold smoked salmon
Dave in AZ honestly, even though I do love the results of my recipe, it is pretty time consuming, I have to rearrange my fridge to get the briner bucket in there, crushing and toasting spices is a pain in the butt sometimes… if you’re trying to impress somebody that will truly appreciate the amount of effort that went in to making them a lox bagel or rosettes, try a custom recipe. If I am just making some lox for the freezer or for a dinner party for Easter or Christmas, I just buy the Hi Mountain Alaskan Salmon brine mix. It is fantastic and you can cure about 15# of salmon for $10 or less worth of their product.
-
RE: Lox or cold smoked salmon
Dave in AZ Took me a while to find the recipe. It is for a 3# side of salmon
1 gallon water
24 grams sea salt
15 grams maple sugar (can use brown sugar if you like)
4 grams of cure salt #1
The spices are to taste. I don’t measure them honestly. Maybe like a 1/2 cup black peppercorns, 1/4 cup red juniper berries, a couple crushed cinnamon sticks, 1/4 cup fennel seeds, 1/4 cup mustard seed, a handful of whole crushed nutmeg. I crush the peppercorn and nutmeg at separate times in a tea towel. Roast the spices in order of hardiness, with fennel and mustard seed last. Dry skillet, 30-60 second toast for each spice. Keep them moving in the skillet so nothing burns. Boil everything in the water then add ice to get up to the required amount of brine solution. A gallon of water is about 8 pounds or so, so I zero my scale with a brining bucket (or large food safe container) on it then add the brine solution and stir in ice until you have a gallon of water and it reaches about 65-68F. Do not add fish to hot brine. I cure my salmon for 3 days or until the fish becomes pretty rigid. I then soak the salmon for 4-6 hours in distilled water to draw out excess salt then cold smoke. -
RE: Lox or cold smoked salmon
I have used both my own recipe as well as a store bought salmon brine mix from Hi Mountain. Both were excellent but also different enough that I have preferences for the usage of the fish after curing. I use maple sugar or turbonado sugar, curing salt #1, and a small amount of sea salt. I toast in a dry cast iron skillet some black peppercorns, fennel seeds, cinnamon stick, and (red or purple) juniper berries. Bring all spices to a boil in water and then add ice to quickly drop the temp to about 65F. I tend to make roughly 2 gallons of brine solution so that I can cover a few sides on Alaskan or preferably Faroe Island salmon. I cover it completely in either a brine bucket with a plate to keep it all submerged, or I use food safe brining bags. Urban Kitchen makes a good inexpensive brine bag. I also like to use skin ON salmon when I cold smoke because it keeps the flesh together much easier during brining and smoking. I don’t cut the skin when I am slicing the lox.
I am in NE Ohio so if I want to cold smoke in the summer, I use a smoke tube like the A-Maze-N tube or maze and I put a foil tray of ice under the salmon. It is super easy to cold smoke when it is cold and then vacuum seal the lox and freeze for summer as well.