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Yes, that was my intent. It seemed to work like a charm. Note that these were whole muscles, not sausage. I am making a chamber to try salami, but I'm not experienced in dry sausage, only fresh. I plan on using a cardboard box for that - nothing but the best!
I'm far from an expert - so as a note to those who see this later, this is what I did, and not an official guide of any kind. I realize most of this is common knowledge on this site.
1. Each piece of meat was weighed, and the cure was calculated for each. There is a calculator on this site...
Wow! Nice looking cuts of meat - the ones I've had to work with sure don't have that belly-like fat cap. Beautiful!
Where are you getting those?
Also, I'm thinking an achiote smoked pork tamale sounds like something I need to try!
Maybe it's the way I cut the shoulder. I actually dissected an outer muscle off to cure separately, and trimmed it up pretty good because I knew I could throw the scraps into sausage that I was making the next day. I do remember butterflying the bulk of the meat and sorta flipping it over, then...
I didn't know him closely, but his comments were always welcome. He helped me out a bit, and I'll not have the chance to repay that kindness, other than by offering my condolences. R.I.P.
Martin - I'd love to know the details of how you do yours, as I'm planning on trying as many things as possible to learn. My ultimate goal is a whole prosciutto, but I'm not ready for that yet.
While deboning a shoulder for my first BBB, I dissected one of the lean muscles intact to make into a ham of some kind. I did two shoulders, so I ended up with two of these lean cuts. I had just done belly bacon, and had a chunk of it uncured as well.
I proceeded to dry cure all three, using...
Pops6927 - ha, you are entirely correct! I've been trying to slice it so thin I didn't notice. I will rotate by 90 degrees and slice the rest. Mind, it hasn't kept everyone I know from stuffing it down their pie-holes. :-)
Welcome, from a fellow newbie. My first bacon was salty, too (I did the test fry), but a 2.5 hour soak made it the best bacon I've ever had. Sounds like you've got more going already, which is good.
You will no doubt soon be inundated with advice from those more qualified than I, so I will just...
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