Matt
That's odd, I thought it would be the fennel that would be predominant given a usage of 2.7% of the meat.
Phil
mattwright wrote:so I cannot put my finger on it, but I am unhappy with my spicing on this one. Something isn't right, and I think it is the juniper. The more I eat of it, the more it tastes like stale pee. Not that have eaten stale pee, but it tastes like it smells..
The more curing I do the more I start preferring just the most basic of cures, with little or no herbs and spices. Just pure porky goodness.
Scratch this recipe up to learning I guess.
mattwright wrote:[---]
The more curing I do the more I start preferring just the most basic of cures, with little or no herbs and spices. Just pure porky goodness.
Richierich wrote:When I did Parma style ham using the site-shop bought cure I thought there was a similar flavour, I made my own cure, following a recipe on here, which was based on the shop cure and the flavour was the same, the more I ate the more I noticed it. I put it down to the juniper, it was the only thing in my mind that could add such an aroma, only other things were salt, pepper and cures.
grisell wrote:Richierich wrote:When I did Parma style ham using the site-shop bought cure I thought there was a similar flavour, I made my own cure, following a recipe on here, which was based on the shop cure and the flavour was the same, the more I ate the more I noticed it. I put it down to the juniper, it was the only thing in my mind that could add such an aroma, only other things were salt, pepper and cures.
I can't see why that cure is called "Parma style ham" if it contains spices. Sounds like delusive marketing to me. Parma ham isn't spiced at all; only salt is used. In the original version, not even cure is added.
SausageMaking.org wrote:
Ingredients:
Sea salt
Demerara sugar
Ground black pepper
Dried juniper berries
Garlic powder
Preservatives(Sodium Nitrate, Sodium Nitrite)
grisell wrote:I can't see why that cure is called "Parma style ham" if it contains spices. Sounds like delusive marketing to me. Parma ham isn't spiced at all; only salt is used. In the original version, not even cure is added.
wheels wrote:grisell wrote:I can't see why that cure is called "Parma style ham" if it contains spices. Sounds like delusive marketing to me. Parma ham isn't spiced at all; only salt is used. In the original version, not even cure is added.
It just means that it's something that turns out as air-dried ham. For example, I could make duck breast 'in the style of' Parma Ham. It's just a way of saying that it's a cure for air-dried ham by using a term that people will understand. We tend not to take these terms literally.
HTH
Phil
Franco wrote:Cure mixture, I sell an all in one ‘Parma Ham’ cure that has the right amount of cure and seasonings or you can make your
own using the following:
250 grammes Demerara sugar
350 grammes coarse sea salt
25 grammes cure 2 (alternative name Prague powder 2)
40 grammes coarse ground black pepper
10 grammes ground juniper berries
25 grammes ground garic powder
Total weight of cure is 700 grammes, this will cure 8 kilos of meat, ie use 87.5 grammes of cure per kilo of meat.
wheels wrote:[---]
...and yes, I assume he has his business to make money.
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Phil
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