by larry » Thu May 17, 2012 5:36 pm
I may get some flak for this, but I tried making Ruhlman and Polcyn's "coppa" recipe from Charcuterie, which uses chunks instead of whole muscle. I'm the first to jump on them and say IT'S NOT COPPA! but in truth, it wasn't a bad product. If you are not familiar with the recipe, it is basically the ingredients for whole muscle coppa, but instead calls for large chunks of pork hand stuffed into a casing. I don't know if such a thing occurs in Italian culture somewhere, but as I said, it worked, and it tasted good, but it wasn't coppa. The differences in technique would be that the initial salting/seasoning doesn't need to be as long due to the smaller size of the meat pieces. Also, lots of pricking and squeezing is needed to eliminate air pockets between the pieces. But if you want something cured that is not sausage, this might be worth a try. Otherwise, I'd make mortadella, which of course is cooked, and which you could be eating tomorrow. Yum.