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Author Topic: Bacon?  (Read 2136 times)

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Offline Woody

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Here's the short story-my inlaws (outlaws) work at a pork plant.  I can get pork at a fair cost thru them.  I was thinking of ordering some pork bellies, and making them into bacon.  I know there is curing, smoking, and more to it than one may think. 

So my question to you is....have you ever "made" bacon?  What are the steps?  Is it worth the trouble? 
The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not. ~Thomas Jefferson



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Offline Randy Kaar

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yes and yes!  i will post some info tomorrow.

randy aka bh
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Offline Randy Kaar

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here is a start, this is from a forum i go too.

BUTT BACON RUB

Cut butts/shoulders or meat of choice into slabs about the size of a chunk of bacon (shoulders I just split in half, boneless ones are easiest and most uniform when cutting "horizontally") and rub with as much of the mix that the meat will hold on both sides, shaking off excess (I've used venison too with good results) After meat is rubbed up good drizzle with maple syrup or honey and lay on sheet pans and cover with plastic for 5-10 days. After 4-5 days drain excess liquid off and re-cover and flip meat. When your ready to smoke rinse meat and dry off and re-drizzle with some more honey or maple and smoke for 8-12 hrs. using "cold smoking" method, you don't want to cook it when you smoke it, having the cure on it you will be ok. then wrap it up and freeze. When ready to eat slice and fry, deep fry or do on the grill (my favorite), you'll never look at store bought the same again.

I've found that loins (for canadian bacan) being denser need more time to cure than the butts, up to 10-14 days, shoulders 5-7 days. I did 10 days on the loins I did Sat.(14 days would have been perfect) And the rub I used I make myself but I'm sure any rub you like would do. Before you do a large batch experiment with a couple small loads to see what fits your taste....you'll love it

shoulder/butt bacon cure
2# of br. sugar
3oz.blk. pepper
2.6# of cure(tender quick is fine)
6.3oz of your favorite rub

randy aka bh
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Offline Randy Kaar

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this is another from the same forum, my opinion is
if you  add salt to a rub, it will get a hammy flavor.
which is not all that bad. made some good ham last
year for deer camp.

Buck Board Bacon....by Jim Morgan

As I write this, I am curing my first buckboard bacon, a homemade bacon made not from the pork belly, but from the pork shoulder. I haven't tried it yet, but from reading many other's opinions, it is divine.

Here's the directions, using the Hi Mountain cure, followed by a homemade cure with directions...


Debone a Boston Butt, or use a boneless butt, weighing about 5 pounds. Slice in half lengthwise so that each
piece is about 3 to 3 and half inches thick. This allows the rub to cure the meat properly. Rub the cure in thoroughly, and don't forget the sides.

Put the butts in plastic ziplock bags and put in the refrigerator for 10 days. Turn every few days.

Now we're ready to smoke. Rinse well and pat dry. If it's not dry, the color won't be as appealing. Let the meat stand at room temp for an hour while preparing the smoker. Heat smoker to 150 degrees for 45 minutes without smoke. Increase the temp to 200 and add the smoke woods ( your choice here..apple sounds good).
Smoke until the temp hits 140 degrees. Let the bacon cool.

It's easier to slice thin if you refirgerate it. And as Hi Mountain says, you now the leanest and most flavorful bacon you ever ate! It will cook twice as fast as regular bacon without all the fat, so keep and eye on it while you fry it up.


Now heres a homemade cure, although I've never tried it.

1/2 cup of brown sugar
1/2 cup of tender quick

The recipe for this one called for a 7 day curing period, then rinsing and drying, and brushing with maple syrup, honey or molasses.

Smoke at 200 degrees until the meat hits 140.


It is now the day after I smoked the bacon. I removed the two butt halves, rinsed well, and soaked in water for just over an hour. I then smoked at 200 degrees on
my WSM using Kingsford Charcoal, apple chunks and cherry chips. After a matter of hours the temp got to 140 degrees so I shut down the smoker and let the meat cool down for an hour. I then brought the meat inside, let it cool for another couple of hours and bagged them and put them in the fridge. Normally I wouldn't let them sit out so long but I fell asleep on the couch!

The next morning I pulled the meat out and began to slice. The refigerated meat cuts a lot easier than the warm meat, so I was able to make fairly thin slices with my Henckel knife.

The result was a lot of strips and some left over chunks and pieces.

I fried up two lean pieces. They tasted like a bacon flavored ham. The crisp texture of thin storebought bacon was not there. It was more like the texture of ham. I plan on frying up some of the fattier pieces and seeing how that tastes.

I would call the taste something of a mix between country ham, city ham, and bacon. It's pretty dang good. However, if I told folks I was serving them bacon they would probably call this ham. Still, all reviews have been very positive. I took biscuits with buckboard bacon to work on Monday and everyone loved them. Also gave the neighbors some for them to try.

The cost of making this is slightly over a dollar a pound, depending on what you paid for the boston butts.
The cure is really cheap. Bacon can go for three dollars a pound to over six dollars a pound in the stores. Same with ham. I consider this a really
cost effective, fun way to come up with a smokey breakfast meat. Tastes great, and is cheap to make!

randy aka bh
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