Thank you rider. The combination of pecan and cherry really works in my smokehouse.Had to wipe the drool off my laptop. Beauties . . .
Thanks Jim. If you were closer you’d be welcome and I’d probably send one home with you.One of those wouldnt make them til tomorrow......Looks mighty good!
And I'd be helping with the dishes tomorrow!
Jim
Thanks again Ryan. Yup sometimes ham just hits the spot.Sure glad my wife was thinking the same as you... she made scalloped potatoes and ham for supper... 2 1/2 plates later... oh my!
Ryan
Just fantastic , like others said .
The colour and look is just perfect, I could just chew on one of those by them selves, and then scollop pototo later lol
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David
Thank you Joe. I’m waiting for supper tonight. If there are any leftovers they will go with breakfast.Great color there, nice work! Ham steak and eggs for breakfast? RAY
Thank you Brian.Now that some ham to be proud of. Well Done!
Thanks much Robert. You and I both know the importance the smoke plays in developing color on meat, but with cured meats the color is also very much effected by temperature. This can be a delicate balance but best color is achieved at about 160F.What can I say that hasn't already been said? Those are nothing short of spectacular. The color on those pork steaks is breathtaking. One can only imagine how incredibly good they were. Super nice job Eric.
Robert
Thank you Hijack. These aren’t your average ham steaks for sure. It’s great when you find that perfect salt/sodium zone. Your numbers sound very good to me.I'm not much on ham unless it's really good ham. That far exceeds the standards of really good ham.
1.85% is my new sodium love - perfect blend of 'there is the salt' without going 'dam that's salty'
My cured beef and pork now gets 1.6% regular salt and .25% #1
I also settled in .75% sugar. I don't really taste the sugar, but it does help the bacon fry up.
Thanks David. Going to tear into one tonight along with a version of your scalloped potato roll. Going to stuff it with ricotta and spinach
Looks fantastic, Eric! I'd slide the whole thing over next to me and stick a fork in anyone's hand that got too close.So at the request ofDRKsmoking ill post some pics of a version of his scalloped potato roll I did with the ham steak. I had company over and was busy so the pictures are poor and I forgot to get one of the scalloped slices but you’ll get the idea.
Base layer of cheese for the potato slices to be layered on. This is Parmesan, mozzarella and sharp cheddar with some garlic powder and fresh cracked black pepper. (P.S, don’t use the store bought pre shredded parm buy a chunk and grate it yourself. The already shredded parm does not melt nearly as well as fresh)
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I layered the scalloped potatoes and repeated the cheese then baked about 30 min at 350*
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While that was baking I lightly steamed some fresh spinach and mixed that with ricotta cheese for the filling and spread that evenly then gently roll it up and bake another 10-15 minutes.
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Then the cut shots.
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Sorry no plate shots.
Yeah it was worthy of that for sure. Luckily there was plenty and no fork fights erupted but they could have with just a few more people to feed lol. Thank you.Looks fantastic, Eric! I'd slide the whole thing over next to me and stick a fork in anyone's hand that got too close.
My God - that is just beautiful. Salivating like Pavlov's dog for sure.