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| Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables. |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
Is it better to wet cure or dry cure a brisket or other cut? To some extent, it depends on what you are going to do with the meat afterwards. Are you going to smoke or cook it further, or are you going to eat it as is? Anyway, how about basturma, an ancient Armenian dish from which the Turkish bastirma and the Jewish pastrami variously derive? It is a rather involved recipe, needing about a month for completion. The meat is served as is. Here is a recipe from an Armenian cookbook I posted some seven or eight years ago. Basturma 10 kg (22 lb) of boneless beef fillet (tenderloin) 600 g (21 oz) garlic 1 kg (2.2 oz) salt 13 g (0.5 oz) saltpeter 500 g (1.1) cumin seeds paprika to taste Cut a beef fillet (tenderloin) in 30 cm (12 in) long, 12 cm (5 in) wide and 6 cm (2 in) thick pieces. Place the meat in a dish in layers, with each of them sprinkled with a mix of salt and saltpeter. Cover with a cloth and leave for 2 days. Then turn the meat, so that the top layer is on the bottom, and leave for 2 more days. Rinse the meat lightly with cold water and let dry on a wooden grate. Arrange the meat thus prepared on a table covered with a porous cloth, tie the cloth edges tightly together, place a plank of wood on top and press down with some weight. Leave for 12 hours. Tie the pressed pieces of meat with a string and hang them out to dry in a shade, after which the meat should feel dry on touch. Rinse and pound some cumin seeds. Peel and pound some garlic. Mix together pounded cumin seeds and garlic with paprika and add some water to reach a consistency of thin sour cream. Cover the dried pieces of meat with the mixture, layer them in a receptacle and let stand for 4 days. Then take out the meat, cover each piece with the mixture again and let stand for 3-4 days again. Repeat this operation 3 times. Take out the meat pieces and hang them out to dry for 10 days. Victor |
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"Steve Wertz" wrote in message ... On Sat, 2 Dec 2006 23:55:12 +0100, Victor Sack wrote: It is a rather involved recipe, needing about a month for completion. The meat is served as is. Here is a recipe from an Armenian cookbook I posted some seven or eight years ago. Basturma This is one of those things you have to try first, then make it if you liked it. Interesting recipe. Can't say I'm going to try it anytime soon. Some of the measurement conversions didn't quite work, though. (salt, cumin). 10 kg (22 lb) of boneless beef fillet (tenderloin) 600 g (21 oz) garlic 1 kg (2.2 oz) salt 13 g (0.5 oz) saltpeter 500 g (1.1) cumin seeds paprika to taste I'd have no idea what "paprika to taste" would be in this dish ;-) -sw 13 grams of saltpeter, or potassium nitrate to 1000 grams of NaCl is 1.3%, compared to the 4% NaNO3 in Prague powder #2, or Insta Cure #2. As well the Insta-cure #2 has 6.4% NaNO2, which results in an immediate curing effect. The nitrate must break down to nitrite before the cure takes place. That's why it's used for dry curing for a long time. The nitrate metabolizes to nitrate, and you get a constant cure for weeks, rather than days. I think saltpeter is pretty much off the market for use in foods. I haven't heard of any other source for nitrates alone. Morton's Tenderquick is .5% nitrate and .5% nitrite. This might be an ideal agent to cure filet. Although, at $12-$18/lb here in N. Cal, even the thought of that is painful. Kent, a certified tightwad. |
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"Kent" wrote in message ... "Steve Wertz" wrote in message ... On Sat, 2 Dec 2006 23:55:12 +0100, Victor Sack wrote: It is a rather involved recipe, needing about a month for completion. The meat is served as is. Here is a recipe from an Armenian cookbook I posted some seven or eight years ago. Basturma This is one of those things you have to try first, then make it if you liked it. Interesting recipe. Can't say I'm going to try it anytime soon. Some of the measurement conversions didn't quite work, though. (salt, cumin). 10 kg (22 lb) of boneless beef fillet (tenderloin) 600 g (21 oz) garlic 1 kg (2.2 oz) salt 13 g (0.5 oz) saltpeter 500 g (1.1) cumin seeds paprika to taste I'd have no idea what "paprika to taste" would be in this dish ;-) -sw 13 grams of saltpeter, or potassium nitrate to 1000 grams of NaCl is 1.3%, compared to the 4% NaNO3 in Prague powder #2, or Insta Cure #2. As well the Insta-cure #2 has 6.4% NaNO2, which results in an immediate curing effect. The nitrate must break down to nitrite before the cure takes place. That's why it's used for dry curing for a long time. The nitrate metabolizes to nitrate, and you get a constant cure for weeks, rather than days. The nitrate breaks down to nitrate. Nor does it metabolize. I think saltpeter is pretty much off the market for use in foods. I haven't heard of any other source for nitrates alone. Morton's Tenderquick is .5% nitrate and .5% nitrite. This might be an ideal agent to cure filet. Although, at $12-$18/lb here in N. Cal, even the thought of that is painful. Kent, a certified tightwad. Sorry for the error. |
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"Steve Wertz" wrote in message ... On Sun, 3 Dec 2006 10:30:10 -0800, Kent wrote: Morton's Tenderquick is .5% nitrate and .5% nitrite. This might be an ideal agent to cure filet. Although, at $12-$18/lb here in N. Cal, even the thought of that is painful. When I can find it, it's $3.99 for 2lbs. Even online, you can't find it as high as $30/bag - $7 max (for 2lbs). -sw I was referring to the cost/lb of filet, which here, at least, has skyrocked in the past 24 mos. If you've used Tenderquick what have you done with it? I'd appreciate your experience. I have found precious little about that specific product, and I'm too much of a tightwad to drop $6 + shipping on a 45 page pamphlet. The one brine recipe they have on their package is for 1/2 cup Tenderquick/quart of water. That much salt is twice the maximum used by most of us. Again, thanks for any ideas. Kent |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
On Sat, 2 Dec 2006 23:55:12 +0100, Victor Sack wrote: It is a rather involved recipe, needing about a month for completion. The meat is served as is. Here is a recipe from an Armenian cookbook I posted some seven or eight years ago. Basturma This is one of those things you have to try first, then make it if you liked it. Yes, of course one doesn't usually spend a month making something totally unknown... but still... I'm not aware of any Armenian restaurants in Texas. However, I notice that Czar's brand basturma is sold on Amazon and also he http://www.rususa.us/apf4/store.cgi-Operation-ItemLookup-ItemId-B000E88GHW. I have no idea if it is any good, but it is surely not exactly inexpensive ($34/lb). Interesting recipe. It is one of the greatest - why do you think pastrami has become so popular? Answer: Because it is an easy-to-reproduce imagined approximation of a mass-produced recipe of something really good, namely basturma. Can't say I'm going to try it anytime soon. Try it if you have time and inclination, it is worth it, as far as I am concerned - it is way more interesting than the usually insipid - and anyway different - pastrami. Some of the measurement conversions didn't quite work, though. (salt, cumin). Mea culpa, sorry! See corrections below... 10 kg (22 lb) of boneless beef fillet (tenderloin) 600 g (21 oz) garlic 1 kg (2.2 oz) salt Should be 2.2 pounds salt 13 g (0.5 oz) saltpeter 500 g (1.1) cumin seeds should be 1.1 pound cumin seeds paprika to taste I'd have no idea what "paprika to taste" would be in this dish ;-) I'd say start with about 1 kg (2.2 pounds) paprika, even if it is one of the "hot" varieties. Victor |
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