Adam
I can't really say how much extra time my leg needed for the following reason. I started to carve it after the specified time and noted that the more I carved the softer the texture of the meat became. I decided to open it up and found there was a fair bit that was still holding moisture. Quite soft and wet to the touch. I continued carving as much as I could and then applied some salt to the wet area and re-hung it. After about 4 days there was no drips evident and I decided to discard it.
The boned leg was just over 9 lbs weight. Franco has done a couple of smaller 'bone in' legs..
http://forum.sausagemaking.org/viewtopic.php?t=927&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0Here are a couple of pics of the ham..
Initial carving, all seems well.
Opened up.. wet flesh still evident..
Don't be put off by the picture, I firmly believe it happened because I did not apply enough cure into the 'tunnel' area internally.. and this is where the wetness was. The next one I cure I will apply more of the cure internally or butterfly it and cure it opened out, and at least double the maturing/hanging time.
I must say that the slices I carved tasted very nice indeed. BTW, yes, the cure is 80 grams per kilo.
Regards, Paul Kribs