Chicharrones recipe

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Chicharrones recipe

Postby Greyham » Sun Feb 24, 2013 5:46 pm

I have worked on this over the last week or so as i had a bit of spare time due to injury. This is fabulous and i highly reccomend you have a go if like me you have an Excalibur dehydrator. Somewhat essential to this.
Chicharrones are a mexican delicasy or humble pork skin snack. There are many ways of making these. But this way creates light fluffy but delightfully crunchy snacks.
Image
This picture taken this morning shows from the right the dehydrated piece of pork skin. on the left in its fluffy gloriousness and twenty secs later a chicharrones. lightly sprinkled with sea salt and smoked paprika.

Recipe
A piece of pork skin from the loin or above the spare rib or collar.
1. You have two choices here. Either remove the back fat from your piece of skin and use else where. Making sure to remove all of the fat.
2. Or simply place the skin with fat into a pot of cold water with a couple of fresh bay leaves and a few peppercorns, coriander seeds and a sliced onion and carrot. These are not essential but will flavor the stock if you wish to use after.
3. Bring to a simmer and cook out until the skin is very soft. Leave to go cold in liquid
4. remove from liquid. it will feel a little firmer but still soft. Carefully remove all of the skin from the fat. and i mean all trace.
5. gently pat dry with kitchen towel and place on mats of dehydrator. Turn to 68 degrees centigrade 155f and dry for approx eight hours or overnight.
6. Now dry and very hard. remove and place in an airtight container until needed
7. To cook warm up and i use organic rapeseed oil for frying. to a temperatue of 190 degree centigrade. drop in a piece of skin and watch....phhooooofff up she comes. hold under briefly before removing directly onto kitchen paper. sprinkle with salt and spice and scoff....lush
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby wheels » Sun Feb 24, 2013 8:00 pm

They can be done without a dehydrator, as can be seen here:

http://www.localfoodheroes.co.uk/?e=691

The neatness of yours rather puts mine to shame though!
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby SteveW » Mon Feb 25, 2013 12:19 am

Thanks guys, I have a dehydrator for making jerky so I'll be giving these a go soon. Do I still need to cook the skins prior to dehydrating if I've cut the fat off for sausage?
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby wheels » Mon Feb 25, 2013 12:24 am

If you want them 'puffed up', you need to boil the skins till soft, and then dry them completely.

HTH
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby SteveW » Mon Feb 25, 2013 12:42 am

Will do...Thanks
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby Greyham » Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:26 am

SteveW wrote:Thanks guys, I have a dehydrator for making jerky so I'll be giving these a go soon. Do I still need to cook the skins prior to dehydrating if I've cut the fat off for sausage?
Steve

As wheels said, it is also imperitive you remove all fat from the skin. I have found through trials that it is a good idea to remove the fat before boiling but again when cooked. this way it is possible to cut that extra thin skin. this will aid drying and later the puffing.
Finally, because all of the fat has been removed and the skin dried prior to frying. this snack is not as calorific.
Do try and vary the spices and salt mixture for sprinkling on the chicharrones.
I generally mix two parts salt to one black pepper, one smoked paprika. Or replace the paprika with a good madras curry powder. being mexican of course, cumin & coriander & chilli powder would also work very well.
My overall conclusion from making these has been some what mixed.
The whole operation, even with a dehydrator, is time consuming and energy consuming. Although great fun. I would find it difficult to do again and again.
I undertool the exercise simply as a way of utilising the vast amounts of pig skin i often have left over. And as it takes me a year to bring on a single pig it is a raw product i do not wish to waste.
If any of you have one or more ideas of how i might utilise pig skin fro my woodland reared Tamworth pigs then please let me know.
In the mean time enjoy
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby NCPaul » Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:03 pm

I posted an Italian recipe that included cooked pig skin here:

viewtopic.php?f=1&t=10034

I believe it changes the mouthfeel of a sausage in a nice way. You might try a small experiment to see what you think.
Fashionably late will be stylishly hungry.
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby wheels » Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:35 pm

There are some good reasons to include it in sausage, but what goes against it , to my mind, is that the same people who will happily pay £1 for a minute bag of 'scratchings' in a pub, turn their nose up at the same thing used in a different way in a sausage. There's 'nowt so fickle' as the UK public!

How about the 'non-puffed' type of pork scratchin's? They'd be easier to make.

I use it rolled in casseroles, and in particular in cassoulet; I'm guessing that you don't sell those though?

There's got to be others, but none spring to mind at present.
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby quietwatersfarm » Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:55 pm

one word - Cotechino

If you have to much rind, just make more Cotechino, simple. One of the greatest foods on earth.
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby quietwatersfarm » Mon Feb 25, 2013 9:05 pm

BTW, that's another sausage (like all my Chorizo) that I was taught to always leave in the tub overnight before stuffing.
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby Greyham » Tue Feb 26, 2013 8:40 am

Ahhh cotechino another italia peasant sausage that i have made many many times. Sadly however, english people are so what fickle toeard this one. I perswonally think it is great and a useful way of utilising pork skin.
But like so many rind emulsions is best served only in the depth of winter.
I love the idea of making scratchings but again it is a time element. So much time and so little profit. Unless of course you are a huge manufacture.
I have when not so pushed, dry cured sheets of skin and then rolled up and cut into long strips and placed on flat trays. Pressed with another tray creating lovely long sticks of crackling. Although a good seller for people pootling around farmers markets, time consuming an not very profitable;
My brain is working but later today i shall be making a batch of my chorizo ready for this coming sat market. this time however, not sausages bu my very popular Chorizo burger. same recipe albeit addition of eggs and reduction in cure
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby quietwatersfarm » Tue Feb 26, 2013 6:23 pm

Where do you do Saturday markets? St Nic's?
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby vagreys » Tue Feb 26, 2013 11:10 pm

Greyham wrote:...I love the idea of making scratchings but again it is a time element. So much time and so little profit...

It's the same the world over. I was talking with Jason Story at Three LIttle Pigs Charcuterie in DC, and he said exactly the same thing - one of his favorite snacks, one of his most popular little items, but one of his most labor intensive products to make. They really are amazing, though, fresh out of the fryer.
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby RodinBangkok » Wed Feb 27, 2013 12:09 am

Without going fully commercial with expensive equipment, I'd probably look at something like a surface trimmer like those from Bettcher. They make short work of trimming and surfacing meat cuts, and would probably make the job of trimming pork skin much faster. Too pricey for home use, but a small operation could save a lot of time, and other uses as well. Google Bettcher whizard for info. Skins are very popular item here best ones are made in the north, and are cut in long strips so they sorta look like curly fries when fried up. Making them in strips saves some labor in cutting the skins. Never made them for sale, we render the fat off the skin, then crank up the heat and crisp up the skins till rock hard and use them for dog treats/chews.
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Re: Chicharrones recipe

Postby SteveW » Thu Feb 28, 2013 12:08 pm

I made these this morning, really nice but not as strong flavoured as normal scratchings. I used salt, pepper and paprika to season. They are a lot of work but I don't mind as an occasional treat. Mine will be consumed after work tonight with a few beers. Thanks for the recipe :)
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