Thursday, January 21, 2010

Bresaola update.

Well, my first project that was birthed and finished on Low on the Hog has happened. The bresaola comparison is now complete. Neither piece came out perfectly, but that is why I do this, to learn what I can "get away with" with my less-than-ideal conditions, to compare and to eat some great things. And I must say that all three happened.











And the end of my last post on this project I thought it would take another week to reach my weight loss goal 40% on the two pieces. Actually it only took 3 more days. The Charcuterie version hit it easily while the Beef version got pulled at 38%, basically because it was getting too hard. I had also mentioned that the Beef version had taken on some white mold. I am still not 100% certain that this was actually the case. The more I looked at it the more I began to think that it was simply salt residue. There were a couple spots that looked more like mold, so maybe it was just a combination.




Just to be sure, I made a salt water solution and wiped down the Beef version and threw it in the fridge for a couple hours to dry it off. And after doing that it looked even more saturated in an outer layer of salt. When I sliced the bresaola in half it was interesting. On left, the Charcuterie version looked just as you hoped it would. A beautiful rich rosy color, even and moist. While the Beef version had a definite dark ring and more ruby center color that was much more constricted in size. They both still smelled very much like their cure, herbal for the the first version and red wine & garlic for the second.



Last night I took them into work to use the slicer for the best results. Taste-wise the Charcuterie version tasted exactly as it smelled, heavy on the rosemary, but in every way you would expect. Nice salt, good, though slightly chewy texture. The Beef version, which has lost its rosy center since I sliced it last night, was a bit more firm, but not really chewy. It is though quite salty. This seems to back up the idea of the exterior color coming from being over-saturated in salt. I do like the red wine and garlic flavors of this version though. In my next preparation I am going to try to find a happy medium. I will lay off the rosemary a bit while also figuring in a wet part of the cure to incorporate that extra flavor, but definitely without the extra salt. Now to figure out which cure goes first, I'm thinking the dry cure. I am also in the process of finding a concealed drying chamber (fridge) so I can slow down the drying (controlling humidity) to promote more flavor maturation inside my meats before they lose all their weight.

3 comments:

  1. The Charcuterie version looks GORGEOUS. Like "do a double take to make sure it's not fake" pretty. Good job!

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  2. Looks great! I wonder how good a lamb loin done in the salt/rosemary cure would be?

    art.

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  3. Rebecca has a lamb lomo in ATL recently and liked it. I imagine you'd have to LOVE lamb to eat such a concentrated blast of flavor from it!

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