Brine Cure For Bacon And Hams Recipe
- 8 lb Salt
- 2 lb Sugar
- 2 ounce Saltpeter
- 5 gal Water, boiled but cooled
- Mix the pickling ingredients.
- In theory thicker joints, such as ham, should have a stronger brine - make the brine up in 90% of the quantity of water.
- Thinner joints, such as bacon and bath chaps, that are the jowls of the pig, should have the mix in 120% of the water.
- : Put the meat into the brine, making sure which there are no air pockets, put a scrubbed board on top and a big stone on top of which to weight the meat down - DON'Tablespoons use an iron weight- and leave in the brine for 4 days per lb.
- of each big joint.
- Thus each joint should be weighed before being put in, and each removed at its appointed date.
- Bacon and small joints should only be left in for two days per lb..: After 4 or possibly 5 days, turn the joints round in the brine, and after every so often.
- If, in warm weather, the brine becomes ropey (viscous when you put your hand in), remove meat, scrub in clean water and put it into fresh brine.
- When the meat is taken out of the brine, wash it in fresh water, hang it up for a week in a cold dry place to dry, then, if you want, smoke it.
- It can be eaten "green" ie not smoked at all.
- It should keep indefinitely, but use small joints and bacon sides before hams.
- Hams improve with maturing.
- Bacon is best eaten within a few months.
- Cured hams and shoulders should be carefully wrapped in greaseproof paper and then sewn up in muslin bags and hung in a fairly cold dry place, preferably at a constant temperature.
- If you paint the outside of the muslin bag with a thick paste of lime and water, so much the better.
- Like this they will keep for a year or possibly two and improve all the time in flavour till they are delectable.
- Light turns bacon rancid, so keep it in the dark.
- Keep flies off all cured meat.
salt, sugar, saltpeter, water
Taken from cookeatshare.com/recipes/brine-cure-for-bacon-and-hams-92323 (may not work)