God gave me bacon, Nature's candy

  • Some of the links on this forum allow SMF, at no cost to you, to earn a small commission when you click through and make a purchase. Let me know if you have any questions about this.
SMF is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

smoothbiker

Newbie
Original poster
Jan 6, 2011
14
11
Rubyville, OH
I've been smoking meats, ribs salt, nuts etc for about a year and a half. Pretty intently. This is my first post about it. I've gotten pretty good at it. By no means am I an expert, nor will I tell anyone that. I enjoy the art of smoking and love the taste. There is almost always room for improvement. I have a notebook I keep all my notes so that when I find it to be perfect for my taste, I will stick with that. I kept telling everyone one of these days I'm going to make my own bacon. Quite a bit of what I've learned as been on here.  I printed out a post about how to do this. Honestly, before this I had no idea bacon was made from pork bellies. I needed a few things first. First step was that I needed the pink cure salt. Then I purchased a 5 gallon food grade bucket with a good lid. Although stores give these away, I didn't want to screw around with hoping I get one. Finally I purchased a high end home meat slicer. I really wanted a commercial one but I can't justify the cost right now. Maybe if I need it enough, I will spend the large chunk on it.

We have a very large Oriental (somewhat international) store here called Lee Lee's and they have pork bellies for $3.19 a lb which seems pretty good. I wanted it to be worth it, so I purchased quite a bit. The pork bellies were not thick like I wanted, so I only purchased one of those. However the pork bellies with ribs attached were much thicker. I decided to buy 2 of them. I've not experienced in trimming meat, but I figured it can't be extremely difficult. All include the pork skin.

Next I make up a basic cure recipe, which of course I got off the same website. It is mixed until it is a clear brownish liquid. I made 2 gallons worth of cure mixture.

01.jpg


Time to prep the pork bellies. Rinse and cut into more reasonable size pieces. It is much easier to deal with the smaller sizes.

02.jpg

03.jpg

04.jpg


You can see that thicker is better... at least for bacon.

05.jpg

06.jpg


Next was to work on the pork bellies with the ribs. It was a little more difficult than I thought but not all that bad. Since the bones are harder to see, I had to cut a little at a time while feeling where the bones were.

07.jpg


I saved the bones for later smoking and packaged them in food saver bags and in the freezer they go. Hey, I'm not stupid! No point in wasting good food. After the ribs are remove, they aren't too bad looking. I like them much better.

08.jpg

09.jpg


Into the cure it all goes. Covered with a gallon size Ziploc bag partially filled with water to keep everything submerged. This has to cure for 10 days.

10.jpg


I have a small Brother label printer so to be safe I printed out 2 labels. First with the date I started the cure and the other with the completion date, attached the lid tightly and placed in my garage fridge. At this point I'm like a little kid at the entrance of a new a candy store, just waiting for it to be opened.

After 10 days, I removed the bucket and wallah!

2-01.jpg


The next step was to give them a good rinse so that there is no cure mixture left on them. I did all this piece by piece. Once rinsed, I sprinkled course ground pepper, onion powder and granulated garlic over all sides except the pork skin. The pork skin will stay on the entire smoking process.

2-02.jpg


The curing was done on a Wednesday and can't be smoked until I have time on the weekend. So I wrapped all of it in saran wrap and placed in the fridge.

2-03.jpg


On the day of the smoke, I unwrapped them all and now it was just time to wait for the smoke to take its course.

2-04.jpg


Now the original instructions were to smoke for 10 hours on 100 degrees. Smooked with hickory wood chips. I have an electric smoker. Started at 100 degrees and couldn't draw any smoke. I figured this wasn't going to work. I played around alot with it until I got a small amount of smoke rolling, somewhere between 115-125 degrees. I now understand why bacon gets smoked for 10 hours.

After smoking was complete I placed all on plates wrapped in saran wrap and placed these in the freezer overnite. The next evening I sliced all the bellies into bacon. I love eating deep fried bacon and the only way it turns out well is to slice it thin. So I did just that.

2-05.jpg


I have a decent size pile of bit and ends. I separated all of these into 12oz size packages (since that's the weight of most store bought bacon is) and used my food saver and froze all but 1 package.

The next day I figured it was time to fry up some delicious homemade bacon. The bacon did not render any grease while cooking. None of it did. I naturally assume that due to a higher smoke temp it the cause of that. I used some olive oil to prevent it from burning. Regardless of grease, the bacon taste amazing. I doubt I will ever buy any ever again, I'm going to continue making my own.

2-06.jpg
 
Looks delicious!  Did you remove the rind after smoking? or leave it on?  I like it either way myself.  And the spareribs you trimmed off the bellies will be mighty tasty too!  If you cure them like you did the bacon, they'd actually be "Bacon-On-A-Stick" lol.... (see my link at the bottom of this post!) - you'll love 'em!
 
Last edited:
Looks delicious!  Did you remove the rind after smoking? or leave it on?  I like it either way myself.  And the spareribs you trimmed off the bellies will be mighty tasty too!  If you cure them like you did the bacon, they'd actually be "Bacon-On-A-Stick" lol.... (see my link at the bottom of this post!) - you'll love 'em!
Sorry, for some reason I never got an email of any posts.  Yup after the smoking I removed the rind.  This was a while back, but I'm pretty sure it came off pretty easy.  You're absolutely right...I took them off but you could certainly leave them on.  I used them to slow cook some pinto beans.  Way better than ham hock.  I think you are on to something there.
 
A good place for pork bellies is the Meat Shop on 202 East Buckeye Road  Phoenix, AZ 85004.

That is where I bought my bellies the last time I made Bacon.  I don't remember the exact price, but 12 lbs came out to just over $30.  And they will let you specify what you are looking for in a pork belly- thickness, size etc....  Although, I don't think they had any with the rind still on... I could be wrong about that though.

http://site.themeatshopaz.com/

Just looked at their website, they are listing Pork Belly for $4.00 a lb.  That is much more than I paid.
 
Last edited:
SmokingMeatForums.com is reader supported and as an Amazon Associate, we may earn commissions from qualifying purchases.

Hot Threads

Clicky