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Notes from a bemused canuck

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[Recipe] Home-cured braseolea

Posted on April 24, 2012May 22, 2012 By admin 1 Comment on [Recipe] Home-cured braseolea

Bresaola is salted and dried just like a salami but it’s made from a single muscle of beef. This means that, though the surface might develop a healthy bloom of mould while it dries, the inside of the meat is never exposed to the air making any kind of bacterial development much less likely.

There’s a common belief that we don’t “do charcuterie” in this country because our humid climate makes meat go off rather than dry; that’s a complete myth. You actually need a cool, moist environment for curing, preferably with a decent breeze. If a sausage or piece of meat dries quickly in dry air the outside becomes hard too quickly, preventing the moisture from escaping from the centre. In moist air the outer surface remains pliable as the meat dries evenly throughout. Most of the best charcuterie in the world is cured in moist temperate climates, often in mountains or where a good clean sea-breeze can promote drying through evaporation.

This is obviously not an accurate description of conditions where I live in Camden Town but I’ve had great success drying meat in my kitchen, hanging close to a north facing window for maximum chill and breeze through the knackered sashes. I also tend to hang over the sink to keep the humidity up. If things get too hot I move things to the shade. In fact the more you can keep an eye on your meat, checking it daily, the better result you’re likely to get.

Many home curers starting out get jumpy when mould appears. Actually a chalk-white bloom on the surface is healthy and any spots of slimy or black mould can be spotted and quickly removed with plain vinegar – one good reason for a daily check. The best reassurance, though, is a good deep sniff. If your meat is going off you’ll definitely know by the smell in fact, in Italy this is still considered the only sure way to check. Testers use a long needle made from horse bone which can be slid into the ham or salami and sniffed to ensure there’s no trace of putrescence.

Have a go at a bresaola before the weather gets too hot (there’s a step by step picture gallery here). The cut of meat is cheap, the process simple and if you start now then by late June you’ll be smugly picnicking under the bougainvillea on your own charcuterie.

1. Ask your butcher for the main muscle in the top round. This is from the top of the leg, usually regarded as a second class roast but excellently lean and close textured for our purposes

2. Trim off all the surface fat and silverskin. Be merciless, it all makes for great stock. Don’t try to remove the single vein of silverskin running through the centre of the muscle – your meat will fall apart if you do.

3. Make up your dry cure from 100g of coarse salt, 100g of sugar, 5g black pepper and 5g of Prague Powder #2. (easily available online here). You can go off piste with the aromatics if you like but I favour the traditional rosemary and juniper. Put the lot through the grinder and reserve half the cure in an airtight jar.

4. Rub half the cure into the surface of the meat and seal it into a freezer bag. Place the meat in the fridge and allow to marinate, turning daily. After a week, take the meat out of the bag, dry it with a paper towel and then rub with the second half of the cure. Reseal and marinate for a second week.

6. Remove any remaining cure and pat dry with paper towels. Tie two pieces of string vertically around the meat then tie a series of butchers knots horizontally around and wrap in clean muslin.

7. Label clearly with date and weight and hang in a cool place, not too dry. Check regularly by taking a good deep sniff for unpleasantness and weighing carefully. Your bresaola will be ready after around three weeks when it’s lost 30% of its weight.

8. I usually remove the muslin for the last week of drying. If there’s a great deal of mould on the surface I wash it off with a clean piece of muslin soaked in vinegar.

9. Slice paper thin and serve as it comes or with with a little olive oil and lemon juice.


All images:

Original source: Tim Hayward for the Guardian

Alternate recipe from Len Poli

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Stocking up the freezer

Posted on April 23, 2012 By admin

Since we recently bought a freezer, I’ve been cooking up a storm to fill it up. So far, aside the pizza bases and sausages, it contains carrot & coriander soup, broccoli & stilton soup, pasta sauce and beef chili. Any comments on what I should do next?

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Bring on the summer!

Posted on April 23, 2012April 23, 2012 By admin

Although I’ve been BBQing for the past few weeks, it’s time to come to the realization that my current BBQ is slowly dying. The burners are a bit unreliable, the hood is fairly burned through, the side tables are showing signs of woodrot. It’s been a trusty little grill, but its time has unfortunately come.

Scottsdales was having a promotion that we couldn’t refuse. Katy bought me a new BBQ as an advanced birthday present, I bought us a gazebo that we could use as a shaded area in the height of summer and we’ll be getting a £100 voucher that will probably be used to buy a chimenea :)

And to top it all off, I’ve found an on-line retailer of exotic meats at decent prices. I’ve purchased some bison mince, some venison mince, some kangaroo mince, some wild boar mince and a couple of venison and bison steaks.

So, with these new purchases, it’s no wonder that it’s going to piss it down with rain for the foreseeable future :D

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My son…

Posted on April 18, 2012 By admin

On Monday, as we were making our way to the bus to go home and cutting through the EBI as per our usual shortcut, Bean passed in front of a table laden with nibbles for a course that was being held in the IT training room. He grabbed two nachos “to eat on the bus” and walked all the way to the bus stop proudly displaying his stolen loot to anybody who would look at it. When we got to the bus stop, he just plopped himself on the ground and started munching. The pose is classic.

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A preview of things to come

Posted on April 17, 2012 By admin

Why do I have a feeling that this, or something very much like it, is something that’s going to be in my not so distant future?

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Weekend in pictures

Posted on April 16, 2012April 18, 2012 By admin

The weekend went fairly well. On Saturday, we had Currys deliver our new washer and dryer, which means that we can now do laundry at the same rate that the beans generates it and, joy of joys, drying it in a proper tumble dryer means that it’s not only dry in half the time of our old condenser dryer, clothing actually comes out dry and not just steamy! Plumbing and plugging everything went smoothly and we’re now up to date with the laundry. It’s the simple joys of life… We went to Tesco to get some supplies and Bean helped me make pasta sauce. Well, I chopped vegetables and he ate them, but he was a good boy while I did that so it kinda counts as helping.

On Sunday, we went to the miniature railway in Saffron Walden and let the Bean loose in Audley End. We managed to sneak in between bouts of rain, and it was a good way to let the child blow off some steam.

  

 

The railway was surprisingly good fun, and a fairly long ride. It’s really cool to see all that they’ve done along the way with all the stuffed toys, and we saw tons of pheasants. All in all, several hours of happy Bean for little money. Good deal, that.

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Monster burgers

Posted on April 16, 2012April 18, 2012 By admin

Katy’s been badly influenced by “Man V. Food” and “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” (and ok, so have I). She wanted to do something different on the BBQ this weekend and proposed monster burgers. Here’s the result:

It’s a grilled chicken breast burger, with bacon, cheese, pickles, lettuce and a fried egg. I’d also grilled some mushrooms and some onions and we’d made onion rings in the oven. The plan was so stack everything on but it just wouldn’t fit in the bread we had at hand, so they had to stay on the side. Next time we’ll know better and use bigger bread :)

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Easter redux

Posted on April 12, 2012 By admin

I need a vacation from my vacation.

We went to Leicester for Easter. We went to the farm on Saturday to see the lambing, and to spend some quality time with Anna and Rho. Bean seemed less interested in the animals and more interested in getting himself and anybody in close proximity covered in straw. We had lunch there and then, after discovering their antique car museum, we headed back to Anna’s parents’ house for a bit more visit. That was funny. Bean got a kiss from Tay (Anna’s dog), who then later on proceed to surreptitiously steal his jam tart right out of his hand while he wasn’t looking. Bean was a very good boy that day, but he used up all of his good-boy point in one go because he’s been a right monster since. Seriously. Murder has been contemplated.

There was a big family to-do on Easter Sunday, with Stu, Jeminie and Sonal coming over to spend the day. The meal was nice, but I really wasn’t feeling up to it and I had, well, a bad mental health day. I was grumpier than I should have been, but there was little I could do about it. We came back home on Monday, and spent a large part of the afternoon yelling at the beast. We went to Ikea on Tuesday to pick up some meatballs and a few odds and ends, and spent a large part of the afternoon yelling at the beast. On Wednesday, we went to Tesco to stock up on meat to fill our new freezer (yay!). I made a large batch of carrot and coriander soup, and we spent a large part of the afternoon yelling at the beast. I had my second guitar lesson that evening, which is cool (yay!) and now I have some hand stretching exercises that should hopefully help with a few stubborn chords. I also made some lemon scones for Katy, which were quite yummy, if I do say so myself.

And that leaves us at today, where I am dead tired from lack of sleep and fatigue at yelling at the beast. We’re a bit concerned, truth be told, because we’re not sure if he’s just being a 3-year-old or if there is some underlying behaviour issue, or something entirely more frightening lurking in the wings. We really shouldn’t read internet articles on stuff like that…

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The cuteness!!!

Posted on April 12, 2012May 16, 2017 By admin

Sleeping hamster FTW!!!

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Back to the daily grind

Posted on April 12, 2012 By admin

Geez. You go on holiday for two days and the pile of email in your inbox is frightening.

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