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Makin Bakin 2 – Perfection Acheived

February 28th, 2010 1 comment
This entry is part 2 of 3 in the series bacon

If you read my first Makin Bakin post you’ll understand my basic philosophy and method for making bacon at home:

  • Bacon is made from pork belly.
  • Bacon is cured with nitrites.
  • Bacon is smoked.

Pretty simple. But as with anything, the difficulty is in the execution. So after thinking about the delicious results of my first attempt at homemade bacon, I decided to adjust my recipe a bit. For my first try, I basically used this method:

  1. Rinse and dry pork bellies.
  2. Sprinkle with curing salt according to the instructions (I used pre-made cure from the Butcher and Packer company).
  3. Place in a Zip-Lok bag in the refrigerator for 5 days, rotating bag every 24 hours.
  4. Remove from bag, rinse in cold water, and allow to dry for several hours.
  5. Smoke in my Bradley Digital Smoker with hickory wood for 4 to 4 1/2 hours, starting at 120° F and increasing to 140° F for the third hour and and 160° F for the remaining time, until the bellies reach an internal temperature of 135° F.
  6. Trim the skin side off of the completed bacon.

The result of this process was good. But not great. I didn’t think the bacon was seasoned (salty or sweet) enough and I thought that it was extra smoked. So for my second batch I adjusted my recipe. And let me tell you, the results were outstanding! Here’s what I did, with major changes in red:

Rob’s Dry Cured Smoked Bacon

  1. Rinse and dry pork bellies. (This time I started with fresh, organic, Vermont-raised belly from Savenor’s in Boston.)
  2. Coat bellies on both sides with a layer of fresh New Hampshire maple syrup (grade B for extra flavor). <– New step
  3. Sprinkle with curing salt according to directions.

    Waiting for Smoke

    Drying Outside (temp was 31 degrees)

  4. Place in a Zip-Lock bag in refrigerator for 14 days. Turn bag every 24 hours. <– 9 days longer than first time
  5. Remove from bag, rinse in cold water, then let dry for several hours.
  6. Place in Bradley Digital Smoker for approximately 4 to 4 1/2 hours. Start at 120° F with no smoke for one hour. After one hour, raise temperature to 140° F and start hickory smoke for two hours. Then stop smoke and raise temperature to 160° F until bellies reach internal temperature of 135° F. <– New smoke & temperature profile
  7. Trim skin off of completed bacon.

The final result, shown here fresh from the smoke, was some of the best bacon I’ve ever had. It had enough of a cured taste to remind me of the bacon I’m used to, but, because it was dry cured over time and smoked with real wood, it was much firmer and the flavor was richer. Since most supermarket bacon is “cured” by pumping it with a curing solution and then “smoked” by sitting in an over for a couple of hours while being sprayed with liquid smoke flavoring, the taste of real dry-cured bacon is simply “denser” and richer. And when you cook it you don’t get all that milky liquid that cooks out of store-bought bacon, which is the reason for its watered-down flavor.

Final Bacon

The Final Product

The final step, since I can’t shouldn’t eat all five pounds in one sitting, is to let the finished bacon spend a night in the freezer to firm up and then send it for a trip though my electric slicer and then into several vacuum bags for future use.

Categories: Food Tags: , ,

MBCR/MBTA Wi-Fi Still Sucks

February 25th, 2010 1 comment

In case anyone was wondering,the Wi-Fi on the Worcester still sucks. This morning I decided to give it a try again and my connection was dropped three times between Wellesley Hills and Back Bay. What a joke. Perhaps the MBCR should have put the money towards some new equipment. I’ll bet on time trains would attract more new riders than shitty wi-fi. Just a thought.

Categories: Rants Tags: , ,

The Olympics are a Fucking Joke

February 21st, 2010 2 comments

I used to take the Olympics very seriously. Especially the Winter Olympics. I’m old enough to have watched the US hockey team beat the USSR to make it to the gold medal game. Since my father was Hungarian, I was brought up to hate Russians, so the victory was probably double-great for my family.

In college and for a couple years after I was a ski instructor, and I lived and breathed skiing. I have been a sponsor of the US Ski Team for a long time, but now I officially give up. Adding snowboarding was bad enough — a bunch of loose-panted slackers doing “tricks” doesn’t exactly honor the memory of Franz Klammer or Stein Eriksen or even Bill Johnson or the Maher brothers. But fine, it’s a new sport, so let them screw around.

Now, however, they’ve added a skiing sport that is simply a fucking joke. I’m talking of course of Ski Cross, which debuted not in the 2010 Olympics as people have been reporting, but as the punchline in the 1984 C-grade ski movie “Hot Dog, The Movie.” Only there it was known as the “Chinese Downhill.” Don’t believe me? Compare the Chinese Downhill below with the New York Times video of Ski Cross.

When the International Olympic Committee starts taking suggestions for sports from a cheezy movie who’s most memorable quote is “What-a ‘za fucka’ is a Chinese Downhill,” they’ve clearly jumped the shark. So they can kiss my ass. And “not on zis side, not on zis side, but right in zee middle.”

I’m sure we’re only a couple of years away from a Triple Lindy in the summer Olympic diving competition.

Dry Aging Steaks at Home

February 17th, 2010 2 comments
cooked steak

The Final Product

I’m a big fan of dry-aged beef. At least compared to wet-aged beef. But I was always under the impression that individual cuts couldn’t be aged by themselves — whole primal cuts were the smallest that could be safely aged at home.

But in the March 2010 issue of Cook’s Illustrated magazine, they talked about a method of aging individual steaks at home (membership required)  by wrapping them in cheese cloth. From their article:

To try replicating these results at home on a smaller scale, we bought rib-eye and strip steaks (each $10.99 per pound) and stored them in the back of the refrigerator, where the temperature is coldest. Since home refrigerators are less humid than the commercial units used for dry-aging, we wrapped the steaks in cheesecloth to allow air to pass through while also preventing excessive dehydration and checked them after four days (the longest length of time we felt comfortable storing raw beef in a home fridge).

I thought I’d give this a try, at least for a couple of days at first, rather than four.

aged steak

After 2 Days in The Fridge

And believe it or not, it worked well. I took a nice organic t-bone steak, wrapped it up in cheesecloth, and put it in the back of the bottom shelf of my refrigerator. I left it for two days and then salted it and cooked it up. And I felt that it was comparable to dry-aged steak that I buy from my local Whole Foods. It was definitely richer and more tender than a regular steak. As Cook’s said:

Sure enough, four days of dry-aging in a home fridge gave the steaks a comparably smoky flavor and dense, tender texture. As long as you remember to wrap the meat in plenty of cheesecloth, place it on a wire rack for air circulation, and store it in the coldest part of the fridge, you can skip shelling out extra money for commercially aged cow.

I will definitely do this again — in fact, I may never eat another steak without aging it for at least a little while. I suggest giving this a try if you like dry-aged beef.

Update 6/5/2010

Alton Brown recently aired an episode of Good Eats (“Porterhouse Rules”) where he described a similar method. Only he made  a home made rig to hold the steak using pie plates and wrapped it in paper towels instead of cheese cloth. But with two of my favorite sources of food information agreeing that this will work, I’m satisfied that it will work. You can find the recipe for the episode here.

Now What?

Get out there and grill some steaks! Yes, that is a picture of my own grilled porterhouse at the top of this post. Interested in grillmarks? Read about my opinion here.

Makin’ Bakin

February 6th, 2010 2 comments
This entry is part 1 of 3 in the series bacon

What Good is a Smoker if You Can’t Make Bacon?

Among all the visions of pulled pork and spare ribs that I had when I bought a smoker, the main thing I wanted to do was make bacon. There really isn’t a greater food than bacon … fatty, meaty, salty goodness kissed with a bit of smoke. And bacon isn’t the most complicated preparation either. With just some basic ingredients and a little time, bacon is pretty easy to make.

But First … To Cure or Not

Commercial bacon is a cured product … meaning that it it treated with nitrite salts to help preserve the meat. And these compounds are somewhat controversial due to their potential direct and indirect effects on health. I say potential because I am not convinced of their harm and I think the worry is overblown. What these compounds do is threefold: deterring the growth of botulism toxins, preserving the red (pink after smoking) color of meat, and subtly altering the flavor of the cured meat.

The Nitrite Concern

There are actually two concerns surrounding nitrites in meat … their direct toxicity and the potential formation of compounds called nitrosamines when nitrite cured meat is either cooked at high temperatures, as bacon usually is, or exposed to a low pH environment like it is in your stomach. The amount of nitrite needed to be directly toxic is pretty high, so I’m not really worried about that. Studies in the 1970s first identified nitrosamines as carcinogenic. Subsequent work has confirmed this. However, there are steps which can be taken to reduce this risk, including cooking bacon at lower temperatures and to a less done final state, as well as adding certain anti-oxidants (like ascorbic acid) to the curing salt.

There are several very good resources describing this on the web, from reputable sources including the University of Minnesota, Oregon State University, and in this Wikipedia article.

So, in the end, I decided to cure my bacon. For me it comes down to flavor. I’ve tried uncured bacon and it’s just not the same. It’s more like … well, roasted pork. I like roasted pork, but not when I expect bacon. I used a commercial cure with a nitrite concentration in the acceptable range, and I didn’t use more than recommended. Additionally, I don’t cook my bacon to anything near well done, preferring it just short of crispy. And finally, I will be adding some ascorbic acid to my cure mix, just to be safe.

An interesting note – much of the “uncured” bacon that one finds in the organic section of the market these days in fact contains just as many nitrites as cured bacon. By law, “uncured” means no additional nitrites were added beyond what occurs naturally in the ingredients themselves. Now look closely at the label of your uncured bacon. You’ll probably see “celery juice” as an ingredient. Wonder why celery juice is in bacon? Because celery juice is naturally high in both nitrates and nitrites. So, by adding it, manufacturers can claim “no added nitrites” or “uncured” while still adding nitrites and getting a cured product with the taste people expect. But don’t take my word for it. Consumer Reports was one of the first to catch this trick when they tested hot dogs. They said:

While the three uncured franks might boast of “no added nitrates,” our testing found that Applegate Farms, Coleman Natural, and Whole Ranch contained nitrates and nitrites at levels comparable to many of the cured models.

And

While a hot dog can be labeled uncured if no nitrates or nitrites have been added, that does not necessarily mean the product is free of them. The three uncured models we tested contained nitrites and nitrates because the compounds occur naturally in spices and other natural ingredients added during processing.

So keep that in mind if you’re buying “uncured” bacon. You just might be fooling yourself.

The Process

The Meat

American Pork Cuts (adapted from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:American_Pork_Cuts.svg)

American bacon is made from cured pork belly, the meat outside the ribcage and extending around the stomach or belly of the pig (labeled “side” in the diagram to the right – don’t ask me why). As far as I am concerned, anything else isn’t bacon, it’s some other form of cured pork. I’m all for that … I come from New Jersey, the home of Taylor Ham after all, just don’t call the other things bacon. For instance, there’s some bullshit abomination popular with home smokers that they call “buckboard bacon.” But it’s not bacon; it’s a cured and smoked pork shoulder. Lose the smoke, chop it up and form it back into a loaf, and you have SPAM. And SPAM ain’t bacon.

So when I call something bacon I am referring to cured, smoked, pork belly.

Getting pork belly can be a bit of a challenge depending on where you live. My normal meat market, which even sells goat, doesn’t carry it. They offered to order some belly, but I would need to take a whole case of three bellies, or about 30 pounds. I really want to perfect my recipes before I tackle 30 pounds.

I did find pork bellies at one of the best specialty markets in Boston, Savenors, but that’s a 40 mile drive from my house. For my first time, I wanted to start making Bacon now, not in a few days when I picked up some belly after work (I work a few blocks away from Savenors). So I tried my local, tiny Asian market. And sure enough, they had some small 1 lb. pieces tucked int their freezer case. I can’t say that these were the best looking specimens I’d ever seen, but they were worth a shot. So my first test batch was made with frozen pork belly.

Dry Curing

Rather than making up my own recipes, I decided to go with a commercial cure mix. This would let me learn about the differences caused by curing time rather than worrying if I had my mix correct. Based on some recommendations on various message boards, I went with a regular and a maple cure from the Butcher and Packer company. For about $5, I got enough cure to dry cure 100 lbs. of meat. Not bad.

You need a surprisingly tiny amount of cure for bacon. The Butcher & Packer instructions say to use 2 pounds of cure per 100 pounds of meat for a dry cure. That equals 0.02 pounds of cure per pound of meat, or just above 1/3 of an ounce of cure per pound of belly.

As for the vitamin C to add … the Oregon State reference lists the effective concentration as 550 ppm (parts per million). So assuming that’s ppm of the total cure weight, I need 550 mg of ascorbic acid per Kg of cure. I’m going to keep these tiny numbers in grams … So 550 mg per Kg is 550 mg per 2.205 pounds. That equals 249 mg per pound (550 / 2.205). That means I need to grind and evenly distribute one 250 mg vitamin C tablet into each 1 lb bag of cure. Simple.

That done, I measured out the correct amount of cure by weight using my kitchen scale (ended up being less than a teaspoon for each piece, but do your own math) and evenly sprinkled it over the pieces. I placed them in a Ziplock bag in another plastic container (just in case) in my refrigerator. And for the next 5 days I simply rotated them each day. Some liquid was released, but not much more than a few tablespoons.

Smoking

Many people online complained that bacon cured too long turned out too salty. So I was scared into leaving my first batch curing for only 5 days. Turns out the people online were either full of shit, overly sensitive to the taste of salt, or used way too much cure. Because my 5 day cure tasted barely salty. But it did have that characteristic red color, so I went ahead and smoked it.

Anyway, I took the bacon out and rinsed it well in cold water. Some people advocate soaking and all sorts of treatments, which I’m glad I didn’t do. I let it sit for several hours to reach room temperature and let a bit of a pellicle form.

I am a fan of real smoke flavor, so I used hickory only and ended up smoking my pieces for about 4 hours, starting at 120° F for the first 2 hours and then stepping the temperature up to 150° and 170° in the third and fourth hours respectively. I kept it in the heat until the internal temperature was just past 140° F and let carryover take it almost to 150°.

The Result

Whole Bacon

I know it might not look like much in this view, but it really did look sooooooo much better than that slimy pre-sliced stuff you buy in the supermarket. And once I cut into it, well, my effort was immediately worth it. Even the cheapo $1.99/lb belly I got from the freezer of my local Asian market was a better quality (read less fatty) than the typical bottom-of-the-barrel belly that becomes mass produced bacon.

The smoke flavor wasn’t too apparent on the first day, but like all smoked foods, really benefited from a few days in the refrigerator. It seemed that the smokiness really bloomed after that. Enough that I might cut the smoke back to just 3 hours next time. As for the flavor, I really didn’t think there was a strong cured, salty, or sweet flavor at all. Either immediately out of the smoker or even several days later. It just didn’t seem to be thoroughly cured. I’m sure this was the result of the limited curing time. I will at least double it to 10 days next time, or perhaps as long as 14 days. I also didn’t detect any difference between the maple cure and the brown sugar cure. So to enhance some maple flavor in the next batch I think I will brush the bellies with some actual maple syrup. Hopefully that will improve the character.

It's What's Inside That Counts

The Recipe

As of right now, here is my recipe, and the one I will follow for the next batch of bacon (I have 5 pounds of belly from Savenors ready to start curing tonight).

  1. Wash belly and pat dry. Leave skin on.
  2. Brush belly with thin layer of maple syrup.
  3. Measure proper amount of cure and sprinkle evenly over all surfaces.
  4. Place in Ziplock bag and allow to cure 10 to 14 days in refrigerator, turning bag every 24 hours.
  5. Remove belly from bag and rinse quickly in cold water.
  6. Allow belly to sit in the air for several hours until a pellicle forms.
  7. Place in smoker at 140° F. After 2 hours, increase smoker temp to 150° F. After 1 more hour, increase temp to 170° F. Allow smoke for three or more hours depending on wood and your taste.
  8. When internal temperature reaches 140°, remove, slice, cook, and enjoy.

Some Resources

Along the way to this recipe I found a couple websites that were very helpful. So thanks especially to Dave Selden and his blog and the “Makin Bacon” post. And also to the 3 Men site and their bacon page.

Riding the Acela From End to End

February 3rd, 2010 1 comment

In early February I had the opportunity to travel to Washington, DC for a work-related conference. My office is just about in the middle between South Station in Boston and Logan airport. Since I would be traveling to DC in the evening prior to the conference, I would be leaving from work. So I had a choice — fly or take the train. Getting to either departure would be equally easy. And after some investigation with our work travel company, the cost was comparable, or even a little cheaper going by train if you factored in parking and car transport at the DC end. So it really came down to just how I wanted to go.

I’ve flown a lot in my life. I spent a good part of my early career flying around the United States. And then for my second job I did a fair amount of business travel. I’ve also flown some of the toughest routes – like Boston to London to Johannesburg South Africa, twice, in coach (Gov’t travel money don’t pay for 1st class). So mucking through airports and playing on airplanes isn’t my idea of excitement.

So I decided to take the train. Here’s my story.

South Station

They called for boarding 15 minutes before the scheduled departure. Then made us stand at the end of the platform for 3 full minutes before allowing us to actually board. Interesting tactic, but not terribly inconvenient in the grand scheme of things. Boarding was a cinch. This totally kicks flying’s ass. For example:

  1. No security lines full of tourists and lost first-time travelers who don’t know how to take their laptops out of their bag for the x-ray machine.
  2. I didn’t have to take off my shoes. My fellow travelers may have appreciated this even more than I.
  3. Plenty of room when finding a seat. And at South Station, plenty of seats available. You’re almost guaranteed to have your pick of aisle, window, or even a table.
  4. No hassle — I can’t emphasize this enough. Just arrive 20 minutes before your train, and then walk right on.
  5. You can take stuff with you. Like the hand-sanitizer I keep attached to my backpack (I work in and around hospitals). Even though it’s a liquid — you can still bring it on board. Ditto for your shaving cream, shampoo, etc. I didn’t have to comb through my pockets and bags looking for all loose change and metal to make it through security. This is worth the extra time in my book.
  6. The seats have room. Even the Business Class seats have real leg room. And footrests. And they recline.
  7. The overhead bins are HUGE. I brought my full-sized garment bag and it fit in the bin over my head (folded in half) and didn’t even take up half the bin.
  8. Electricity. Real 120V electricity. Two outlets for each seat. Charge up your computer or whatever.

The train left on time and then picked up a few people in Back Bay. Then on to Route 128, where a bunch more people got on. But even after that my car still had several open seats.

We made Providence Rhode Island in about 25 minutes. Seriously. There’s a stretch of track in Mass where the train can hit 120 MPH, and the Acela takes full advantage of it. After Providence we were down to three of four open seats in my car, but it still didn’t feel crowded. There’s actual leg room on this train so the seats feel roomy and not claustrophobic.

The ride to New Haven was interesting. There was still enough light left for me to see some nice coastal views around Mystic, CT. The train slows down for much of this part, but it still moves along.

It was dark before we reached New Haven and totally black before New York so I don’t have too much to say about this section. I just sat back and read and enjoyed the room.

From New York through Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore, I will admit that the time started to drag. The train isn’t high-speed by any stretch of the definition in this section, so it is pretty boring. But getting up and moving around helps.

Tips

As I said, the overhead bins are huge, so as long as your suitcase follows the published size guidelines you should have no problem, assuming you can lift it up to the bin. At the end of each car (leaving South Station — the front of each car leaving DC) there is a small closet where you can hang a garment bag if you want.

There is a footrest for each seat, which was perfect for me when I was working on my laptop. It was much more useful than the tray table which was way too high.

There is also a club car where they serve basic sandwiches and soda. Amtrak apparently has a contract with Pepsi so there are no Coke products, but I made due. It’s kind of nice to be able to stand up and go get something to eat or drink whenever you want. Much nicer than the one-time half-a-can beverage service on a plane.

While the dining car has quick sandwiches and snacks (and oh yeah, beer), you may want to bring your own food as well. But I think the moving around and walking to the dining car and back is worth it.

Overall Impression

In the end, the Acela is a trade-off of comfort and convenience for speed. A flight from Boston to BWI is about 1.5 hours. Add an hour driving onto the end to get to DC itself and an hour in the airport prior to the flight and you’re investing about 3.5 to 4 hours to take a plane. The train is about 6 hours, downtown to downtown. So you’re really giving up two hours of travel time for less hassle and more room. If you don’t have to be somewhere in a hurry, I think the train is worth the extra time. It’s just so much easier … no security hassles, easer working because of the electricity, and more room. I would take the train again.

Categories: commuting Tags: ,