eatchicago wrote:Jamie,
Nice work. Pastrami has been on my to-do list for quite some time. Your success has produced some serious jealousy that's going to drive it higher on my list.
Best,
Michael
Mike G wrote:
If we don't manage to turn up a better source for pork bellies, I'm kind of leaning toward buying the rib bellies and trimming them myself in the future for maximum belly. I got a nice looking belly that way, cut the ribs so lean they hardly seemed worth saving but the belly looks quite good. But I hope to find better, somewhere.
Ironic that it's so hard to find pork bellies in a city built on them....
Bruce wrote:Can you give a few details about the brisket you started with? Where? Grade?
Jamieson22 wrote:It was a 13 pound packer from Excel Corned Beef (Lake St, near Peoria Packing). Honestly I am not 100% sure of the grade, so maybe someone else can chime in that may know.
G Wiv wrote:Jamie,
Excel uses Choice grade beef.
After 7 Italian Beef Joints yesterday, at the Beef A Thon finals, I didn't think I'd be hungry for beef for weeks. One look at your delicious looking pastrami pics changed that in a hurry.
Enjoy,
Gary
Jamieson22 wrote:Bruce wrote:Can you give a few details about the brisket you started with? Where? Grade?
It was a 13 pound packer from Excel Corned Beef (Lake St, near Peoria Packing). Honestly I am not 100% sure of the grade, so maybe someone else can chime in that may know. They sell them for about $1.50/lb or so, and it comes in cryo. This is pretty much the only (cheap, reliable) source I know of around here for packers, and where I get all my briskets.
I probably trimmed about 1.5-2 pounds of fat off it, trying to leave a thin layer of fat cap as I wanted to be able to just slice and eat. Once done I separated the flat and point and cut each against the grain.
Jamie
Bruce wrote:Something to think about. Now that the weather is cooling off you can brine out on your balcony fairly easy in an ice chest or even a plastic bucket with a couple of ziplocs full of ice.
Jamieson22 wrote:would I really need to use 6x the recipe for the brine or is the concentration of it more important than the volume (does that make sense)?
Jamie
Bill/SFNM wrote:The concentration (and time) is all that really matters as long as the meat is completely submerged in the cure.
Bill/SFNM
Jamieson22 wrote:I like to be extra clear when it comes to eating meat that has sat on my deck for a week
Jamie
Jamieson22 wrote:I think everyone that has a smoker (and I think everyone should) should put this pastrami recipe on their short list.
Has anyone had any luck with Paulina or any other butchers? As far as I remember Paulina sells a nice thick bacon, so you have to figure you could at least order one raw.
Mike G wrote:
As discussed recently, these guys sell Berkshire bellies at about $3/lb., which is getting more reasonable and something I'm going to try one of these days, though still more than double an industrial one from Peoria. The equivalent from Niman is about $5.50/lb.
http://www.berkshiremeats.com/belly-skinless.html
Mike G wrote:Ronnie-- in what way do you find them to be off? I've only made sausage once so far-- the wine and garlic one-- and the result was overpoweringly winey and garlicky, no one but me could really stand to eat it. (Though maybe if it had a couple of months in the freezer to mellow, it would be better.) Anyway, yeah, that recipe didn't exactly work for me, I'm curious about some of the others.
Jamieson22 wrote:The bacon is off the smoker and ready to be chilled and sliced. I skipped the step of air drying it in fridge for 12-24 hours as the recipe calls for. I am assuming this is to form a pellicle for better smoke adhesion. Like I could wait another day to smoke this stuff
Bill/SFNM wrote:On the other hand, curing is said to be inhibited at temps below 35F. I have a small wine cooler that I picked up at a garage sale that I use for charcuterie, cheeses, etc.
Cathy2 wrote:Bill/SFNM wrote:On the other hand, curing is said to be inhibited at temps below 35F. I have a small wine cooler that I picked up at a garage sale that I use for charcuterie, cheeses, etc.
Until now I had never desired a wine cooler, but I have finally seen the light! Is this where you are curing your confit? Do you mind sometime an expanded explanation of how you are using your wine cooler? Tips?
Cathy2 wrote:I tried Jamieson22's pastrami at Burt's last week. I had somehow missed reading this thread the first time around, so I didn't realize you had gone all out to cure the meat yourself. I have had pastrami made from corned beef soaked several days to desalt, then cover with spices and smoked. Your smoking and braising method was a revelation.
The photo of your refrigerator: the bacon was in the plastic ziploc bags and the brisket brined in the large plastic container in the rear. Right?
Jamieson22 wrote:Also visible is leftover Friendship Chinese, Kraft American cheese (used to give the dog pills), Filbert's Black Cherry soda, the start of a hangover, and a tub containing a hank of hog casings
Jamie
jleblanc05 wrote:I made the pastrami you so graciously chronicled! OMG!!!!! What a fabulous piece of meat it turned into. I have been trying unsuccessfully to make my own at home and this was better than any I have ever eaten anywhere! Thanks for the beautiful pix for inspiration!!!