Wohoki wrote:And Dougal, it is perfectly possible to over-boil meat and leave it dry as a bone. ... Cheaper cuts of meat contain a lot of collagen, which breaks down and lubricates the meat ...
Tough, I'll accept, of course. 'Stringy' even. Over-
boil I'll accept.
But "bone dry" - by *poaching*, fully immersed, without the water temperature ever exceeding 85C??? And then cooling off still fully immersed.
Hmmm....
BUT - I wonder...
Vernon speaks of weighting his ham during poaching with a "large stone". As such, it would be in direct (intimate) contact with the base of his pan, and like that, I just wonder if it might be subject to rather higher temperatures...
When cooking using an improvised double boiler/bain mairie - for example when melting chocolate - if the inner pan touches the bottom of the outer one, the temperature can soar way beyond the typical temperature of the water bath - burning the chocolate.
So, if the ham is being pressed onto the base of the pan, I think its possible that the 'poaching' may have been more intense than Vernon realised. And we know from roasting that bone-in meat roasts faster than boned, and that is illustrating how well the bone conducts heat through the meat.
Is it possible that the stone is to blame?
(Mrs Grigson speaks of a boiled piece of wood to keep the meat submerged, from which I infer that the ham is *floating* beneath the floating wood.)
My guess would be that the ham could have had a fair cooking, pressed onto the base of the pan, even while the bulk of the water was coming up to temperature - the more so the greater the difference between Vernon's heat inputs for 'heating up' and 'simmering' (ie how much he was able to 'turn it down' once the 85C had been reached).
Vernon has hopped about across many threads with this project. In one, I did pass on others of Mrs Grigson's tips
1/ about re-starting with fresh poaching water if it (the water) tasted "excessively salty"
2/ chucking a trotter into the poaching water (providing a collagen source) to give a more 'jellied' result
What's the general feeling about smoking for 4 days at 45C?
And in "intense" smoke.
That seems rather high to me for 'cold' smoking, and a bit cool and long for either 'hot' smoking or US "BBQ" steam and smoke roasting.
I note that Heston Blumenthal's infamous roast beef is "cooked" for 20 hours at 55C
http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/datab ... 4821.shtmlMy understanding was that the smoke would be better thinner, cooler (I know about the climate) and longer. The question not being *how* to get the smoke cooler, but if it *needs* to be cooler.
I note that the smoking process is said to have seriously toughened the rind. My suspicion is that it could have had the same effect on the internals.
Weights. I'm a bit surprised that the weight gain after injecting and 28 days curing would end up being less than 4%. (Vernon spoke elsewhere of a 6.5kg start weight.) I don't know what it might mean, but it does seem strange, given the oft-quoted figure of 8-10%.
And nearly 7% loss seems a little high for 4 days of smoking of a ham. I'm thinking that a ham has less surface in proportion to its volume than a slab of bacon or a sausage.
I'm slightly surprised that after injecting, 28 days soaking in cure, and 4 days smoking, that there should be an overall 3% weight loss.
What do the experienced heads think of those weights?