My wife rocks!

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Steve H

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Feb 18, 2018
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Newark New York
Came home from work to see my wife got me 2 pork shoulders. About 20 pounds at .90 a pound. Now, I need to think about what I'm going to do. I know 10 pounds will be going for my UMAi pepperoni. I've been waiting to do this for months. The other 10 will remain to be seen!

pork.jpg
pork.jpg
 
I'm going to be doing the same Monday...
(I don't like going anywhere on the weekends...)
And some lean Ground Beef.
End game is Snack Sticks, and maybe try some Kielbasa.

My Sam's Club has Boston Butts (Pork Shoulders, I believe. Aren't they the same?) for $1.16 a pound through next Fryday.
So I'm going to stock up on some ammunition for stuffing.
Have fun Steve!
 
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FWIW, The weight of a butt, 1/2~3/4lb. is the blade bone. I always take this into account when buying pork butts if I need a certain amount of meat for a recipe like sausages. I see you have 18.61 pound total, figure 17.5ish pounds of meat to work with. Looking forward to what you decide to do with them!

And I always save the bones for stocks....
 
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FWIW, The weight of a butt, 1/2~3/4lb. is the blade bone. I always take this into account when buying pork butts if I need a certain amount of meat for a recipe like sausages. I see you have 18.61 pound total, figure 17.5ish pounds of meat to work with. Looking forward to what you decide to do with them!

And I always save the bones for stocks....

My wife always requests the Christmas Ham Bone and makes some of the mostest wonderfullest Navy Bean Soup with it.
:emoji_heart_eyes:

I have a question about good meat buys and ground Pork.
If I was to buy a nice Boston Butt, with the intention of stuffer use, could I grind it, package it into pounds, and freeze it for future sausages?
Or should I chunk it and grind at the time of use?
I plan on just using frozen (Lean) Ground Beef as the other half for the mixture. (1 to 1 meat ratio)

Everybody? Anybody?
 
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My wife always requests the Christmas Ham Bone and makes some of the mostest wonderfullest Navy Bean Soup with it.
:emoji_heart_eyes:

I have a question about good meat buys and ground Pork.
If I was to buy a nice Boston Butt, with the intention of stuffer use, could I grind it, package it into pounds, and freeze it for future sausages?
Or should I chunk it and grind at the time of use?
I plan on just using frozen (Lean) Ground Beef as the other half for the mixture. (1 to 1 meat ratio)

Everybody? Anybody?
It is best to use meat freshly ground when making dry cured or smoked sausages. You could use it for fresh sausages though. I cut into large chunks just small enough that they will fit into the tube of my grinder; and freeze those. I use it within 3 months.

It is also best not to buy already ground meat for making dry cure or smoke sausages. Ground meat you buy in a store is the most contaminated meat in the grocery store.

If you MUST buy meat already ground, I highly recommend buying whole cuts and then having the butcher grind it for you so you know you are getting freshly ground meat. Use it for making sausages that day, do not freeze for later. And if you tell the butcher you will be making sausage, he can probably grind ice cold fat in with the meat for you to get the ratio of fat to lean meat where you want it.
 
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It is best to use meat freshly ground when making dry cured or smoked sausages. You could use it for fresh sausages though. I cut into large chunks just small enough that they will fit into the tube of my grinder; and freeze those. I use it within 3 months.

It is also best not to buy already ground meat for making dry cure or smoke sausages. Ground meat you buy in a store is the most contaminated meat in the grocery store.

If you MUST buy meat already ground, I highly recommend buying whole cuts and then having the butcher grind it for you so you know you are getting freshly ground meat. Use it for making sausages that day, do not freeze for later. And if you tell the butcher you will be making sausage, he can probably grind ice cold fat in with the meat for you to get the ratio of fat to lean meat where you want it.

Well, I don't have to... get GB, just thought it might be more convenient.
Mostly, I'm interested in Snack Stick type of stuffins.
But also some 32 mm Kielbasa.

I was thinking about grabbing a couple of Boston Butts while on sale, and thinking about breaking them down before freezing. Either grinding, then freezing. Or chunking into batch sizes, 1 or 2 pound packages and freezing.
But grinding it myself. Better control of what is actually ground, or discarded. (Having a vessel or artery looking at me from a snack stick is not appealing to me.)
But wanted to ask before I went down the wrong path.
Grinding my own makes more sense, naturally. But buying a snack stick is totally out of the realm of any control. More so than buying ground beast. At least by buying some London Broil, or stew beef, or other beastly bits, I can see what is going in the grinder. :emoji_wink:

Another thought is wondering about making the stuffing entirely, then freezing it to hold it for stuffing at a later date.

All this is instead of freezing large, as bought, meats to hold for a future processing date.

So I think I'll follow your lead about making grinder feed sized pieces, and freezing as ready to grind in the near future stuffing meat. Just wanting to bank some while the producers are selling cheaper than later.
Making butt bites for the grinder. (For my grinder, I think miniature cubes.) :emoji_rolling_eyes:
 
My wife always requests the Christmas Ham Bone and makes some of the mostest wonderfullest Navy Bean Soup with it.
:emoji_heart_eyes:

I have a question about good meat buys and ground Pork.
If I was to buy a nice Boston Butt, with the intention of stuffer use, could I grind it, package it into pounds, and freeze it for future sausages?
Or should I chunk it and grind at the time of use?
I plan on just using frozen (Lean) Ground Beef as the other half for the mixture. (1 to 1 meat ratio)

Everybody? Anybody?

I always slice the butt in strips that will feed right into my grinder. Then freeze them in 2 1/2 lb. vac packs. Cause I rarely make more than 2 1/2 pounds of sausage at a time. On a rare occasion I will make a 5 lb. batch, so I'm set with 2 packages. When I thaw them out to grind I usually grind them when they are still partially frozen, so the ground meat stays really cold.
Al
 
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Hi Steve!!
You could turn that second Shoulder into Buckboard Bacon.
Or you could turn it into "Pulled Cured Butt Ham".

Or you could split it in 2 & make some of each, like this one:
Buckboard Bacon and Pulled Cured Boston Butt Ham

Bear

I'm thinking about the buck board bacon. That does sound good. I haven't heard about pulled cured butt ham before. You have a link for this?
 
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