#1
Posted 04 August 2011 - 08:58 AM
Raw, bone in lamb breast, halved, for $.99/lb.
Lamb Breast - Raw
(Forgive me, I don't know how to intersperse photos and text and this site so I used links)
This was cured in the "basic cure" using the salt-box method with a head of fresh-pressed garlic for 2 days in the fridge. Then wiped down and smoked over pecan for 3 hours at about 165F.
Lamb Breast - Smoked
The lamb was then deboned, sliced, and cooked in the oven at 250F for about 30 minutes (that's about 1/3rd of a boned slab's worth of lamb bacon you see here). Lamb bacon can be tough and rubbery but slow cooking in the oven on a half sheet pan solves that.
Lamb Bacon - Cooked
Then assembled into a Lamb BLT with thin sliced red onion, cucumber, cheese, and mayo (as well as the lettuce and campari tomatoes). Served with garlic olives and peperoncini.
Lamb BLT
It's going to be hard to top this at dinner time.
-sw
#2
Posted 04 August 2011 - 09:18 AM
This looks awesome! I do not have a smoker but instead have started using a smoker box in my Weber gas grill. What smoker do you have as they look really well smoke with a good colour?
Cheers
Drew
#3
Posted 04 August 2011 - 09:44 AM
-sw
Edited by Sqwertz, 04 August 2011 - 09:58 AM.
#4
Posted 04 August 2011 - 12:34 PM
Have you read eGullet's Kitchen Scale manifesto?
My friend's Kickstarter: Sugar Mill Cake Company is building a new kitchen, you can get cookies!
#5
Posted 04 August 2011 - 04:35 PM
I nominate this sandwich for inclusion in the Ultimate BLT Sandwich topic.
#6
Posted 04 August 2011 - 04:58 PM
Looks so fabulous.
#7
Posted 04 August 2011 - 06:03 PM
And no, I didn't toast the bread because that's not how it works in my house. And I've already taken a beating for that in another forum. You already have crispy bacon and crispy lettuce. You need fresh, squishy white bread for texture contrast. It should stick to the roof of your mouth. Save that toasted white bread for your peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
-sw
#8
Posted 08 August 2011 - 11:18 AM
#9
Posted 09 August 2011 - 08:32 PM
So, suppose I have no smoking apparatus aside from a gas grill (put wet wood chips in a disposable aluminum pan over a burner on one side, meat on the other, with the burner off), with no way to keep the temperature under about 225F. How closely could I approximate this?
#10
Posted 10 August 2011 - 09:13 AM
My first take on this the lamb wasn't smoked at all and it was still great stuff. Lamb shouldn't be heavily smoked anyway. I don't know anybody that had tried it and wants to try it again. There's nothing to stop you from trying it before you decide to smoke it or not. I would even SUGGEST doing that as there's still time to leach some salt out of it at that stage - if it's too salty.
Here's some pics of the unsmoked version. Sandwich is with avocado and ranch-mayo.
(And no, I don't own any sort of shop - that was just a figure of speech for a theoretical French market street)
-sw
#11
Posted 10 August 2011 - 09:23 AM
Also, you just don't want the fat to start seeping out too much when you smoke it. A little fat is OK. The unsmoked version was baked in the oven for 2 hours at 200F to "loosen it up" some. So 225F shouldn't be too hard on it. Bacon is pretty dense stuff and not a lot of water to evaporate.
-sw
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