Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Basic Dry Cure, Asian Bacon

The Basic Dry Cure was one of the first recipes out of Charcuterie that I attacked once I placed my first order for curing salts and such from Butcher & Packer in Detroit, back in 2006. Since then I have made "bacon" many times. Lately I started doing variations of flavoring along with the basic dry cure. The largest variety I tried was back in the jowl post. So when the challenge was posted last month I decided that I would try to improve upon some of those ideas. We talked about which one showed the most potential for deliciousness and have it still be fairly easy for some of our readers to be able to replicate themselves at home. So we decided to have another go at an Asian Bacon.



On top of out-doing ourselves with the Asian Jowl, we wanted to come up with a great usage of the bacon that was also fun, interesting and flat-out tasty. So we figured that with so many versions of the good old hamburger going on out there, this would be a great topping for an Asian Burger.


The Charcuterie book recipe calls for three ingredients in its basic dry cure: salt, sugar/dextrose and pink salt. For this variation we changed only one thing in the dry cure itself, the sugar. We chose to split the sugar options into half white sugar and half dark brown sugar. That took care of the curing part, but we wanted to add in some more flavor. Much like what we did with that jowl, we simply added some homemade 5-spice to the cure. Since we weren't cooking it sous-vide this time, we knew the spice had to be big enough during the cure. We went with a nearly 1:1 cure to flavoring ratio, using barely a touch more cure than flavoring. It looked like too much 5-spice, but we knew we wanted that flavor imparted nicely.

After our liberal application of the flavored cure, we placed the belly into a vacuum-sealed bag and placed in it the fridge. It didn't need to be flipped since the bag keeps it in constant contact with the cure and added flavoring, which helps immensely. It cured for 8 days until it showed some firmness throughout but not too much resistance. At that point it was rinsed off and placed back into the fridge for a few hours to form a pellicule.


Another thing we wanted to do differently this time was to actually smoke it. Since we wanted a bacon, not just a salted belly, it was a must-do. But did we want to use a wood? Almost immediately I thought it would be a nice touch to keep with the Asian theme and smoke with some tea. After reading about a bit, I came up with a smoke recipe:

1/4 C green tea
1/4 C white rice
2 t allspice, whole
5 pc. star anise, whole
1 T dried orange zest
2 t cinnamon stick flakes
1 t black peppercorns
1 t pink peppercorns



Since we only had one-third of a Slagel Farms belly (usually nicely balanced lean/fat) and the smoke blend was small, we thought that our stove-top smoker would be ideal for this application. I pulsed the smoke blend in the spice mill a few times and spread half of it out over the hot-spot in the smoker. I placed the heat on medium-low. Once the smoke started I placed the belly inside with a probe thermometer. About 5 minutes later smoke began to bellow. After about 30 minutes I refreshed the smoke blend and flipped over the belly. About another 30 minutes later I added around 1 T of Alder smoke flakes just to add a hint of wood smoke and by the time it had burned out the internal temperature hit my target of 155˚F. It came out and immediately went into the fridge again.


The next day we took it out and sliced it. That was when the tasty part began! We grabbed some Slagel Farms ground beef, a couple seeded rolls from Whole Foods, I whipped up some Sambal Oelek aioli (1 egg yolk, 3/4 C oil, 2 T Sambal Oelek, 1 clove garlic and 1/2 t Dijon) and sliced up the last of our miso pickled cucumbers our friend Steve gave us. We also made up a quick cucumber salad as a side. All this added up to a juicy and flavorful Asian inspired burger. The bacon tasted so nice. The 5-spice was perfectly present without being overbearing. The smokiness, which had worried me the night before when smoking was actually perfect. It wasn't harsh and you could even pick up on some of the spices in the smoke blend. It was quite different from the smoother and more familiar wood smoke but this new twist definitely gives you something to think about next time you want to make some bacon at home.

6 comments:

  1. Now this is a great idea. I loooove 5-spice. Interesting smoke recipe too.

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  2. picked up your site from the charcutepalooza map, i'm in chicago too! This seriously looks amazing. I need to figure out how to get a smoker set up in my place. Anyway just wanted to give props on a job well done!

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  3. Thanks for stopping by you two! WTF, smoke smelled much more harsh than it was in the final product. Rice was most interesting part. Not sure what it contributed!

    BadFly, glad to hear there's another charcutepaloozer in the 2nd city. Where you getting your meats? What is your living space like, might have some smoker ideas.

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  4. Darrin.. that is one badass piece of bacon my friend.

    I've been making bacon at home for about 4 years now, but I haven't strayed from the generic recipe.. you've now inspired me to give the "asian" bacon a try.

    all the best.
    todd

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