`saucisson wrote:I use Franco's chorizo sausage mix and add 60g to a kilo of Tesco standard minced pork along with 2g cure#2. So it may not be classic chorizo but it's what my son likes (he thinks it is homemade pepperami) and takes about 2 minutes to make.
We're camping on a Dorset farm for half term, we get mains electricity, a chemical toilet disposal point and that's it
welsh wizard wrote:
The chiller ones are now developing at a much slower rate and are developing a white ghosting on the skin which I preseume is the white mould that evryone talks about. Cant wait to give them a try.
Cheers WW
wikipedia wrote:A corollary is a statement which follows readily from a previously proven statement. In mathematics a corollary typically follows a theorem. The use of the term corollary, rather than proposition or theorem, is intrinsically subjective. Proposition A is a corollary of proposition B if A can readily be deduced from B, but the meaning of readily varies depending upon the author and context. The importance of the corollary is often considered secondary to that of the initial theorem; A is unlikely to be termed a corollary if its mathematical consequences are as significant as those of B. Sometimes a corollary has a proof that explains the derivation; sometimes the derivation is considered to be self-evident.
Oddley wrote:Spuddy, any meat before mincing will have various pathogens on the surface of the meat, distributed throughout the meat during the mincing process.
The idea of curing and drying is to kill these pathogens, before they produce toxins and thereby produce a sterile interior of any meat products. All the stages including drying are an important part of this process.
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