As been asked to see the recipe for this wonderful mouth watering ham I am endeavoring to comply with the request, being technically challenged on these things (posting ) and not the things I produce which it seems to be second nature.
The following is what I have done from the concept without any alterations and have been told by a very good friend who comes from the area where they was first produced that what I have created is as close as any one can get.
As follows
I basically do what we call an English cure, take a leg of pork and rub in curing salt, place rind side down in a non-metallic container elevated up from the bottom so that it will not sit in the liquid that comes from the leg. Place a light coating of salt on the top of the leg. Cure for three days per inch ... remember we are curing to the 'center', so if the height of the leg is fifteen inches then we are curing for seven inches.
The liquid brine:
I use the following:-
8 pints of Fullers ESB
3 of 4 tins of Tate & Lyle treacle 907 gm
40 juniper berries
30 gm whole black peppercorns
Place the beer in a large pot (restraining yourself from taking a nip to make sure said beer was still good), run boiling water in sink or tub so that you can place tins of treacle in to warm up so that they can be emptied easily.
Place the peppercorns and the juniper berries in a plastic bag and crush. Add to the beer and treacle mixture in the pot. Place on stove and bring to a boil, turn down and simmer for 1 (one) hour, leave to cool.
This brine can be kept in the fridge for over a week by itself.
after leg has been cured in the salt two week I usually rinse with tepid water and then place in cold water for a couple of hours, this removes excess salt, this is the same process I do when making my Schinken.
Normally the leg is then placed in the cooked brine solution for three days for every Kg of meat, for me this would get very expensive (beer wise) so I place the leg in a vacuum pouch and add 1 Lt of the brine and vac pack. I turn the bag every day without fail so that the liquid penetrates all sides.
At the end of the time take out of the brine rinse with cold water and hang to dry (1 or 2 days depending on temperature and humidity)
Cold smoke for an eight hour period for as follows, 2 days of smoke, 1 day of rest then 1 day of smoke, do any combination so long as you do the resting part in-between.
The following are a few photos that managed to take:
Suffolk Ham
Suffolk Ham with side (streaky) bacon
Suffolk Bacon
Suffolk Hams. if you look closely to the ham on the left you can see some of the juniper berries and peppercorns (crushed) on the outside.
Another view of the Suffolk ham
Now that I have seemed to have mastered posting of photos I will have to dig out others
Robert
But again, what do I know.