
I love bacon myself, and I love that this is one of those early food-staple necessities that's stayed with our society just because it tastes so good. Before refrigeration, pork belly was particularly perishable, due to all those striations of fat running through it. So you could pack it with salt to preserve it, just like corned beef. Smoking further extends the life, as the outer layer of smoked flesh is even more hostile to bacteria than just salt alone. The other option was to pickle the pork, but that was mostly reserved for muscle, as the vinegar would tenderize tough muscular cuts as well.
So to make my own bacon, I purchased a 13 lb Berkshire pork belly from D'artagnan, with the ribs and skin on. There's just a few ribs, but you can whip them out in one go with a fillet knife. I then sliced it into three sections, as I wanted to flavor each one differently. Plus I don't have a plastic bag big enough to hold a whole 13 lb belly. One was made with a savory combination of crushed garlic cloves, bay leaves, and cracked peppercorns. The second was a sweet-style cure with Shagbark Hickory Maple Syrup. The last I just left plain, for assorted uses. To this I added a mixture of kosher salt, sugar, and sodium nitrite.
Sodium Nitrite helps to extend the shelf life of

Anyway, the bacon cured for seven days, then I smoked them on my kettle grill for 30-40 minutes. The maple-bacon got an applewood smoking, the garlic-herb and plain bacon were smoked with hickory. After that, I put them in a 200F oven for two hours to bring the internal temperature up to 150 F. Then, the skin got sliced off (and saved for flavoring beans, as well as my roasted sauerkraut), and the rest of the bacon got divvied up by my meat slicer.

It'll keep for about 2 weeks, but I'll end up freezing a lot of it. I initially expected the smoked, burnished ends of the bacon to be the best, like the crust on BBQ'd pork, but they were unpalatably salty. It makes sense, since they were in direct contact with the salt cure. The interior was much more even-handed though. Hopefully when I finish this batch, it'll be warmer and I can completely smoke the bacon, rather than transferring it to my oven. For the second batch, I'm thinking of doing a Cajun-flavored section, another with Herbs de Provence, and a third perhaps with brown sugar or molasses. Or I could make pancetta, which is not smoked, but rolled up like a big cinnamon bun and flavored with garlic, white wine, pepper, and nutmeg. But right now, time to get frying!
1 comments :
Oh gosh,
Your bacon and eggs looked so delicious I had to go make some myself, but alas I had only cheap store bought bacon.
Tracy Z
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