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ianeccleston

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Posts posted by ianeccleston

  1. Has anyone else had a problem with the dehumidifier taking too much moisture out of the chamber? Although I have the Grainger dehumidifier control set quite high, my other hygrometer tends to show a 40-45% humidity if I leave the dehumidifier on. My salame came awfully close to getting "case hardening," and I ended up just turning the humidifier off for the rest of the cure.

    Ian

  2. Thanks all for the great discussion. I just got a 6-bottle Haier wine fridge on sale for Black Friday w/ free shipping. But based on the discussion, it sounds like the humidity issues will likely make this unusable for salumi curing. Bummer; I should have read the whole post prior to buying it instead of just looking at the pretty pictures!

    Thanks!

    Ian

  3. Thanks for the feedback: I'll probably go with Slagel Family Farm or Wettstein Organic Farm. The former delivers to Mado restaurant - killed, eviscerated, etc. I took a butchering class at that restaurant , so hope to be able to remember my lessons when it's time to make porchetta. I buy meat from the Wettsteins' regularly, so might cross-shop a bit.

    As for the natural thing, really I'm just looking for a healthy, humanely raised pig. If it gets non-organic feed is lower on my priority list. I just want high-quality meat (nice thick belly, well-marbled meat, good flavor) that's raised in a clean and relatively happy setting, and is as "natural" as possible. Preferably "natural" would entail no antibotics, hormones, organic feed, etc., but the limited exposure to these is more important to me than everything being absolutely "organic."

    Cheers,

    Ian

  4. Thanks for the tips posted thus far. One more question - the guanciale that I am now drying seems incredibly fatty. We cut into it after a week of drying to make some amatriciana, and it seems about 10% fat and 90% meat. Should I trim the fat?

    I'm confused in part because the Intertubes says that guanciale is leaner than bacon. Alternately, some say that they thought their guanciale was too fatty.

    BTW - Chicago-area Gulleters, this organic pork jowl was $3/lb. from Organic Pastures, normally at the Evanston Farmers' Market, but also available throughout the winter on a bi-weekly basis.

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  5. I too made gravlax for the first time for the holidays. If you haven't tried it, pick up a pound of salmon and try it - it's easy and not expensive if you use farmed salmon. (No doubt better with wild, but ....)

    I compared quite a few recipes online and ended up with this: Combine 1 cup sugar, 1 cup salt and pour over 3 lbs salmon (farmed). Rub in 2 tbs juniper berries, 2 tsp coriander, some dill, black pepper and wrap in foil. Turn every 12 hours -- very tasty after 3 days in the fridge (I didn't put weights on it).

    Ian

  6. I was thinking coriander seeds. This will be my first time trying arrack - at your suggestion I'll leave the coriander out of the first test batch. I'm tempted to leave the star anise in though, it seems like it would go with the hibiscus really well.

    Maybe I'll add a bit of lemon too. Does that sound puncy? (I am a punch novice -- really I'm just trying to tweak the "spice, sweet, weak, strong and sour" that are referenced in the famous punch poem)

  7. *Major bump*

    Funny - five years later and I'm considering the same task. I ended up roasting a whole big beast, not a suckling in 2004, BTW. This year, a smaller party, a smaller pig. And yet the search for a good recipe for porchetta of suckling pig. I found the butcher, but not the technique for a home oven. Any ideas?

  8. Thanks for the bump! Three years after posting in this thread that I bought a hinged terrine mold, I finally made my first pâté en croûte: ground pork, pistachios and a pork tenderloin a la Ruhlman's Charcuterie.

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  9. Anyone that voted for a cheesesteak or facsimile thereof rather than a Roast Pork Italiano from Philly is just wrong.

    Vesuvio's is right around the corner from where I live/work.  I love those guys, I truly do.  But cheesesteaks, contrary to popular belief, are NOT the best sandwich to be had in this town.  They just aren't.  Vesuvio's isn't known for their cheesesteaks.  This is a fluke and I'm curious how it happened.  Could the PR machines be at work?  How a restaurant that isn't known for it's cheesesteaks (or it's sandwiches in general, at least as far as I've known) could end up on this short list in the company of Katz's pastrami or Central Grocery's Muffaletta and other Holy Grail sandwiches is a mystery to me.

    I had the same thought!! Broccoli rabe, provolone, roast pork. Yum.

  10. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20778329/

    The Today Show is apparently having a contest for the best sandwich in the nation. One of the five finalists is the "Frenchy's Fantasy" at Perry's Deli in the loop in Chicago.

    Has anyone had it? I tried it today... whoa - double decker roast beef sandwich with bacon. Not the best sandwich I've had; possibly the largest.

    Next time I'll try the peanut butter, ham and bacon with tomatoes and mayo sammy there...

    Ian

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