Guest guest Posted January 13, 2005 Report Share Posted January 13, 2005 >Okay, Ms. Glutenator, your description of lardo caught my attention >and after doing a little google research, I think I'm going to have to >try a batch out of curiosity more than anything else. I could find >several places that sell it, but either they were really high or out >of stock. I couldn't find a recipe or a hint about the >salt:water:fat:spices ratio. Can you post a suggestion, even if you >don't have it perfected? Thanks mucho!! > >Katy Well, I just packed a piece of fatty beef in a bunch of salt. I mean, put some salt down on the bottom of the container, then the beef, then pour salt all around it and over the top. The salt filled the entire container (tupperware, in this case) so I just snapped on the lid. The recipes call for stone weights, but as long as the entire thing is covered it seems to work. The salt gets full of moisture and turns into a kind of mush. Some recipes for salt beef call for holes in the container so the extra moisture gets out, but I can't see the point in it. The same " recipe " is how they make anchovies, so I tried another container with some smelt in it. I also did one with half salt and half brown sugar, with nutmeg, allspice, and cayenne in it. Another experiment was to take a beef roast, coat it with molasses, then rub salt all over the molasses. Set it up on lids or something so the moisture can drain. Do this for about 2 weeks, rubbing it with molasses and covering it with salt. This turns into something like prosciutto when thinly sliced. Good stuff! In terms of bacteria ... bacteria don't grow in a solution with more than 30% salt (and 10% inhibits most of the bad ones) so anything IMMERSED in salt isn't going to putrefy. The thing to watch out for is " air holes " ... but since the salt " melts " and pretty much soaks into the whole piece of meat, I think it's safe enough. Or at least, I've survived so far! Given how easy all this stuff is, you wonder why it's so expensive ... of course, I haven't tried the " real " stuff yet, I should ... Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2005 Report Share Posted January 13, 2005 > > Well, I just packed a piece of fatty beef in a bunch of salt. > I mean, put some salt down on the bottom of the container, then > the beef, then pour salt all around it and over the top. The > salt filled the entire container (tupperware, in this case) so > I just snapped on the lid. Great! One last question, does the final product taste anything like the meat? I'm asking because I was thinking about combining pork fat and ghee to make something that's spreadable and taste sorta like butter, but is very low casein. THanks! Katy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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