petertr wrote:Hams; hocks; back & streaky bacon now in the initial dry cure period. It seems that some time is then needed to allow the cure to mature / equalise out and finish curing to the centre of the meat. So what next?
Remove from curing container OR scrape off the remaining cure mix OR rinse in water OR soak in water for 24 hours.
Then hang to dry for three days OR hang to dry at 10C, in an air current for 7 days or longer OR stack on shelf at 4-6C, 73-80% relative humidity and dry before smoking.
I don�t have anywhere airy which is sure to stay cool enough. If stacked on a fridge shelf after rinse or soak, might mould growth be a problem?
If a solution of Potassium sorbate is used to suppress mould growth, what concentration would be needed?
Hi Petertr and welcome!
There are others with more experience than me, but let me try and be helpful.
Yes, at the end of the salting period, you should rinse off the residue of the cure.
You seem to have dry cured ham and bacon.
Bacon's easy. You could slice off a little and fry it right after rinsing. If its very salty (depends upon your cure) you may wish to soak it for hours or days to reduce the salt. (In the fridge, fresh water every 12 hours and taste the bacon when you change the water - just as a guideline suggestion.)
I try and cure for flavour rather than preservation, so go fairly light on the salt input, and, not having excess to remove, don't soak at all.
Leaving it for a couple of days to 'dry' (and for the salt to equalise, and the residual nitrite to work towards exhaustion) can only improve the bacon. Some prefer rather dry bacon, and might hang the piece (in the fridge) for longer. Its just a matter of preference.
You want to allow air movement all around the pieces, so some improvisation will be needed.
You should have a dryish surface 'pellicle' before applying smoke.
Now, the hams.
Dry-salting of ham is usually the first stage in preparing a raw ham rather than a cooked ham. (We don't have enough english vocab for 'ham' types!)
I'm not up to raw ham, myself, yet, so I'll leave that for others. I'll just say that because of the thicker meat, long slow maturing and drying is involved.
Smoking is another big area of variation. Our american friends cook ham in hot smoke. In Europe prolonged cold smoking is more usual - whether or not the ham is to be otherwise cooked. That is, *if* its going to be smoked.
What are you aiming for?
A while back, I spelt out in detail what I did when brining and cooking a small ham - which may be helpful if you are not intending the raw ham route just yet.
http://forum.sausagemaking.org/viewtopic.php?t=1990Since writing that piece, I have acquired a �20 precision digital scale, which I'd recommend. And my next little ham will be experimentally cooked using the 'keep hot' setting of a rice cooker...
Sorbate. Seen it on ingredients lists, dunno anything more!
Happy to learn about it though!