Preserving (rec.food.preserving) Devoted to the discussion of recipes, equipment, and techniques of food preservation. Techniques that should be discussed in this forum include canning, freezing, dehydration, pickling, smoking, salting, and distilling.

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Default Dry Curing Ham

Has anyone ever tried to dry cure a ham, or any pork?
Take a look at this link "Dry-Curing Virginia Style Ham":
http://www.ext.vt.edu/pubs/foods/458...58-223.html#L4
If you have, what ratio of salt by weight to saltpeter have you used?
Has anyone used Morton's Tenderquick to dry cure?
I would like to try this initially with Morton's Tenderquick applied to pork
tenderloin in the fashion suggested by this retired professor, by applying
Tenderquick and refrigerating for 7 days.
Any thoughts would be most appreciated.

Kent



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Default Dry Curing Ham


I have made the Pea Meal Bacon on the Morton web site. Always came out
good.

John


Kent wrote:
> Has anyone ever tried to dry cure a ham, or any pork?
> Take a look at this link "Dry-Curing Virginia Style Ham":
> http://www.ext.vt.edu/pubs/foods/458...58-223.html#L4
> If you have, what ratio of salt by weight to saltpeter have you used?
> Has anyone used Morton's Tenderquick to dry cure?
> I would like to try this initially with Morton's Tenderquick applied to pork
> tenderloin in the fashion suggested by this retired professor, by applying
> Tenderquick and refrigerating for 7 days.
> Any thoughts would be most appreciated.
>
> Kent
>
>
>

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Default Dry Curing Ham

Kent wrote:
> Has anyone ever tried to dry cure a ham, or any pork?
> Take a look at this link "Dry-Curing Virginia Style Ham":
> http://www.ext.vt.edu/pubs/foods/458...58-223.html#L4
> If you have, what ratio of salt by weight to saltpeter have you used?
> Has anyone used Morton's Tenderquick to dry cure?
> I would like to try this initially with Morton's Tenderquick applied to pork
> tenderloin in the fashion suggested by this retired professor, by applying
> Tenderquick and refrigerating for 7 days.
> Any thoughts would be most appreciated.
>
> Kent
>
>
>



I've cured ham and bacon using Morton Sugar Cure; followed the
directions in the Morton's book and cured it (boneless) in the "crisper"
of the refrigerator. Then hung it in a smokehouse.

I don't think I'd do it the same way today; it was way too salty and
never turned pink -- but it tasted good. (this was 30+ years ago.) I
would use salt, brown sugar, and Prague Powder, and I'd probably cure it
with the bone in, and inject some of the cure around the bone.

Bob
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