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Dave W

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Posts posted by Dave W

  1. It could be any Saturday rotuts. I do enjoy elk for sure it has a gamy pungency that begs to be paired with bold assertive umami heavy flavors. Plus it is an excuse to push my steaks to beef-unfriendly levels of rareness.

    I have some hunter friends and so am lucky to receive elk meat in barter for sausage making and drying services (although the one whose salami failed has never returned any meat to me; I hope he enjoyed the bratwursts).

    There is also a local butcher that sells elk meat but the prices are quite deer.

    One time he sold me some elk ribs which I rubbed and smoked over charcoal and then finished on a hot GAS grill with a sauce glaze. I hope that doesn't disqualify it from being BBQ.

    If colorado did .25 billion in pot sales in 2014 I'd estimate you wouldn't have been the only person bringing "that" back to your home state.

  2. I compost and recycle and grow my own vegetables, and do pretty well about not letting things go to waste so I feel ok about that part.

    But again I live in suburban USA and excessive food packaging from normal food sources is nearly unavoidable.

    And I eat beef so almost by rule my kitchen isn't green on balance.

    • Like 1
  3. I don't know what Salumi recommends or what your conditions are but you can lower the RH at this stage to 60-65% rh to get to the final weight.

    I've toured a commercial operation that finished their products at lower humidity for the final stage.

  4. Pancetta for cooking would be fine at 25% loss but lonza for slicing and serving raw I'm not quite so sure. How does the meat feel when you squeeze it? I tend to go by firmness for whole muscle cures but funny enough it usually only feels firm enough to me once it is <65% raw weight.

  5. Look into Venturi style cold smoke generators, you need much much longer than 1-2 hours in the cold smoke for many applications such as bacon or some sausages.

    Edit to add and as you saw a soldering iron is unreliable at best.

  6. Djyee you're suffering from a foundational misunderstanding here. Lean pork as described in your post is not the same as tough pork you would find in a shoulder. That meat is not "tender" by any measure unless you tenderize it mechanically (grinding) or by cooking.

    Torolover if the meat shredded easily but was dry it's overcooked. If it didn't fall apart but was dry it's undercooked, and the gelatin hasn't rendered fully to release it's moisture. BBQ shredded pork as noted above is effectively what you're dealing with here and unlike lean pork or steaks it's not as simple of an equation as internal temperature.

    You wrote it was heritage pork which could mean different thing depending on the breed. But most heritage pork is fattier than commercial pork rather than leaner.

    A final possibility is that you got a cut other than shoulder that was mislabeled. Even the shoulder picnic for example dries out easier than the shoulder butt.

    • Like 3
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