by JollyJohn » Tue Feb 01, 2011 7:51 am
I've made biltong using the following recipe many times, and it is good. One word of caution, don't let your butcher put the meat on the tenderiser, this pushes lots of spikes through the meat, and allows too much salt into it.
Good luck, John.
Biltong
• 2.5kg. Topside
• 200ml. Cider, or wine vinegar
• 50ml. Worcestershire sauce
• 3 Fresh chillies
• 3 Cloves of garlic
• 1 Oxo cube
• Large handful coriander seeds (roasted & coarsely ground)
• 4 tbsp black peppercorns (roasted & coarsely ground)
• 500 g. course sea salt
• 150g brown sugar
• 1 tsp Bicarbonate soda
Zuzz the vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, chillies, garlic and Oxo cube in a food processor.
Cut the beef into strips about 4cm thick. Pack the meat into a smallish bowl, so that it fits tightly
Add the vinegar mixture. Leave for one hour.
Meanwhile, mix the coriander and pepper together in another bowl.
In a third bowl, mix the salt, sugar and bicarbonate of soda together.
Remove the meat from the marinade, but reserve the marinade for later use.
Add the beef to the bowl of spices, mixing it around until evenly coated. Save any spices that don't stick.
Bury the spiced beef in the salt and the sugar mixture and leave it for a maximum of 6 hours.
Remove the beef from the brine and dip it back into the reserved vinegar marinade for another 15 minutes.
Remove the beef from the marinade and using the vinegar, wash all the salt off (don't skip this bit or the biltong will be unbearably salty).
Squeeze the beef to remove as much liquid as possible. Roll in the spices once more (grind extra if necessary). The meat is now ready for hanging.
Cut lengths of string, and tie them tightly around one end of each beef strip. Tie the string to the top of your hanging contraption and make sure that they hang freely without touching anything on the sides or bottom.