I'd like to see if anyone can explain or give me some other ideas concerning a stuck smoke I am dealing with at the moment. On Thursday I started working on some lunch meat and stuffed 10 lbs of veal bologna, 13 lbs of capricola and 10 lbs of turkey into 4.75" synthetic bolgna casings. I placed them in a preheated smoker and let gradually increased the temp to 180F. Everything started off without a hitch but then each ran into its temperature platueaus. I'm used to these stalls but this stall lasted for hours and hours. The bologna was made with veal and was very lean and it stalled for maybe two hours then went to cooking and finished in about 12 hours. However the capricola and the turkey stayed in a stall for several hours before it finally began creeping up. At 4:00 - 25 hours later - the capricola reached 150 and was pulled. Its now 5:00 and the turkey has another 9 degrees to go before it reaches 160. I'm guesstimating it will take another 3 hours to reach the target temp which will mean I have a total of 29 hours in the turkey which if far longer than I expected.
Anyone have any ideas. At the moment I know that the casing size has something to do with it but that doesn't explain why the bologna cooked off and the others stayed on the plateau. The only common denominator in these two sausages is that both recipes called for the use of gelatin. I've read where gelatin is made from collagen and collagen acts as a heat sink and require massive amounts of heat to break down but I'm not clear as to whether these traits transfer over to the gelatin itself or is only true in collagen. Other than this, I'm at a total loss for an explanation.
And BTW, I have checked my temps with six different digital thermometers so its not an error in measurement.
I know it really doesn't matter cause it is what it is and it will be ready when its ready but I would like to understand why if you know what I mean.
Thanks.
Oh, and this is a good example of why someone shouldn't omit curing salt.