belly and jowl bacon -

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shellbellc

Master of the Pit
Original poster
OTBS Member
Jun 7, 2006
1,757
19
Valley Forge, PA
Here is our 4th bacon project this winter.  One belly I used a maple cure from sausage maker, the other belly I used charcuterie recipe for maple cure bacon but I used hickory syrup instead of maple syrup.  10 day in the cure, 48 hour cold smoke over cherry wood using a-maze-n smoker.

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Jowl bacon slice up.

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Jowl sliced

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Going in the oven

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We really like the hickory bacon, unfortunately the cost of hickory syrup is quite high!  Haven't tried the jowl's yet...bacon is really good! 
 
All those pic's look delicious, great job!!!

I never heard of hichory syrup but I bet it's real tastey.
 
All those pic's look delicious, great job!!!

I never heard of hichory syrup but I bet it's real tastey.
There is only one place on line that I've found it, I think the take the bark from a shagbark hickory tree and boil the bark.  It's not as sweet as maple but it really had a great flavor on the bacon.
 
 
ShellBell,

I forgot to mention---Being a pure, born & bred Yankee, the first time I ever heard of a "Jowl" was on the Beverly Hillbillies!

Sounded good to me then, but not near as good as your "Jowl Bacon" looks.

Bear
 
ShellBell,

That is some great looking bacon and unlike my dear friend Bear, I have known what a jowl was since I was a little boy, but I must admit it's the first time I have seen jowl bacon!  It all looks great and I absolutely love bacon, I don't care what it is made from it is the hogs gift to man!  Speaking of the Hickory Syrup, where did you find it on the web, I would like to get some to try!  I like maple syrup but it is a bit too sweet for me sometimes.  I think I would like to try the Hickory Syrup, and who knows may make my own someday if I can figure it out, we have all kinds of hickory trees on our property, only thing I ever knew they were good for was hickory nuts and squirrels.  Keep up the good work and keep the bacon rolling Shell.

Your SMF Friend,

Barry 
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good looking bacon , jowl bacon is great too,, i mix up jowl with venison and form in a cake pan and smoke

it and turns out like bacon really good... never heard of hickey syrup where did you get that?

did you cure it the frig  for how many days, love to have dealtails of how you made it..
 
Found this, in case it helps anyone:

When the editor suggested this topic (the elusive hickory syrup) I recalled having seen some mention of the syrup while browsing in Dave's Gardens forums. In short order, I relocated the posts that I remembered. A DG member had said that hickory syrup was easily made using cracked shells of various hickory nuts, as well as by boiling shed hickory bark. He was kind enough to email me a copy of his writing on the subject of hickory syrup making.

Self-described hickory "nut" Dr. Lucky Pittman tells about his experience with homemade hickory syrup in a paper submitted to the Northern Nut Growers Association newsletter. With his permission, I present the following instructions for making your own hickory syrup from bark or nutshells.

Ingredients:

a large pot full of cracked shell and husk, or cracked whole nuts from shagbark or mockernut hickory, or of exfoliating bark scraps collected from shagbark, shellbark or pignut hickory trees.

Sugar

Water

Wash and drain the nuts, nutshells or bark pieces to remove loose dirt. Put the bark or shell into a large pot and cover with water. Boil the mixture all day. (Makes the house smell good!) Strain out the solids and measure the liquid. Return the now brown, aromatic hickory "liquor" to the pot and add sugar in a proportion of one and a half times the amount of sugar as you have of liquid, for example four cups of liquid needs six cups of sugar. Boil this for thirty minutes. Pour the syrup into canning jars and seal them. (Not specified, but I would suggest you may want to store in the refrigerator) You may adjust the amount of sugar a bit but too much sugar will simply crystallize in the jar.

That sounds simple enough. I will give certainly give the Hickoryworks folks due credit; I'm sure they've been diligent in standardizing their recipe to turn out a consistently high-quality product. A video on their home page will give you a little more insight into the technical aspects, such as Brix testing, of their process. Between hints from Hickoryworks, and the experience shared by Dr. Pittman, I think we have the makings of some fun experiments in hickory home brewing to warm up the rest of autumn. Good luck, and let me know how it turns out. I'm off to identify some local hickories.

Source:

[font=arial, helvetica, clean, sans-serif][font=Arial, 'Bitstream Vera Sans', Verdana]http://davesgarden.com/guides/articles/view/2646/[/font][/font]

There are some other hits on the Net, if you search "Hickory nut/bark syrup".

Bear
 
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