Showing posts with label Meat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meat. Show all posts
Friday, 23 July 2010
Sunday, 13 September 2009
For the meat lovers
Now THAT, my friends, is what I call a proper a T-Bone steak (from a "proper"cow)! And big enough for 2, although Jerry would have loved to have it all to himself!
Hope you all had a super weekend.
Monday, 31 August 2009
Not your average sunday roast
It's been a long search, but I have finally found a small producer of grass fed beef locally (about 40km away). They raise Welsh Black cattle, and this is what they say about their beef:
The cattle are free-range fed on pasture grass supplemented with hay and natures minerals to give the meat a natural flavor. The cattle are hormone and GE free and are not routinely drenched. We do not use chemical fertilizers or pesticides on the property but only apply natural products like seaweed fertilizer.What they don't say here is that the meat is ABSOLUTELY DELICIOUS! Fabulous flavour, real beef colour (no preservatives) and a good bit of marbling too. We had a T-Bone steak last week, and it seemed almost sinful to have any condiments with it.
The meat in the pack is welsh black steer raised on our property to 3 years of age. The meat has been aged on the bone for three weeks to give tenderness and full flavor then packed on trays for convenient freezer storage.
With this find I can now say that 100% of the meat (pork, lamb, beef) in the freezer is local, from small producers, and is all bred for flavour (large black pork, welsh black beef, wiltshire lamb). Come late spring we may also be able to say all the chicken is home grown. Wouldn't that be fab?!
So it seemed rude not to have a roast beef sunday, but this time something a little different. As we were going to be out and about in the afternoon I decided to make a pot roast and pop it in the slow cooker.
It was just too easy to prepare:
- brown the meat
- throw a sliced red pepper, basil, a sliced red onion and a sliced carrot into the slow cooker
- add the meat, then top with a jar of home grown tomatoes and their juice, and season to taste with salt and pepper
- put on the lid and leave for 6-7 hours on low
- if you like, thicken the sauce with a bit of cornflour before serving. We had this with mashed potato and broccoli.
As an extra treat I made meringue and a small pavlova to use up the 8(!!) egg whites I had leftover from making Gary Rhodes bread and butter pudding on saturday. That's dessert sorted for this week.
Saturday, 13 December 2008
Being my own butcher
Sorry folks, I got distracted by garden stuff and forgot to update you on being my own butcher! I don't mean actually killing anything (for the squeemish....and the general euphemism for this is "processing") - I just mean turning big hunks of lovely pork into meal size portions.
First - here are my lovely hunks of pork - shoulder and loin/belly

So out come my trusty books - Hugh's meat book, and my John Seymour and my Carla Emery - for a quick crash course in pork anatomy!
A quick cut to the loin section and already we have something that looks familiar! Then it's off with the ribs, and slicing loin chops/steaks.

Mmmmmm ribs! And the belly bit went straight into a dry cure for bacon

I cut the shoulder into a roasting joint for slow cooking overnight in the oven, and the rest I diced to use in casseroles and tagines.
Then it was the leg of pork. Oh My - 10.5kg (!!) of roast and hammy lovelyness-to-be. But 2 people don't need a 10.5kg ham or roast - and besides, I don't have a pot big enough, so it's time to get he serious kitchen tools out - a hacksaw!! (with a new cleaned blade, or course)

et voila! It already looks more manageable. 1 ham down, a ham and 3 roasts to go! You can see one roasing joing on the black tray.

Once I'd cut and bagged 3 roasts I was left with my 2 hams - and into Hugh's West Country Cider Cure (ooooh aaar) they went the next day. Cider cured roast leg ham is on the menu this Christmas.
LOVELY.

And the best bit? All this pork came from the piggies we were looking after for King Valley Free Range - tasty heritage breeds that have lifed a happy piggie life with room to run around, dig around, wallow, eat apples, acorns and chesnuts, and do all those things piggies like to do.
First - here are my lovely hunks of pork - shoulder and loin/belly
So out come my trusty books - Hugh's meat book, and my John Seymour and my Carla Emery - for a quick crash course in pork anatomy!
A quick cut to the loin section and already we have something that looks familiar! Then it's off with the ribs, and slicing loin chops/steaks.
Mmmmmm ribs! And the belly bit went straight into a dry cure for bacon
I cut the shoulder into a roasting joint for slow cooking overnight in the oven, and the rest I diced to use in casseroles and tagines.
Then it was the leg of pork. Oh My - 10.5kg (!!) of roast and hammy lovelyness-to-be. But 2 people don't need a 10.5kg ham or roast - and besides, I don't have a pot big enough, so it's time to get he serious kitchen tools out - a hacksaw!! (with a new cleaned blade, or course)
et voila! It already looks more manageable. 1 ham down, a ham and 3 roasts to go! You can see one roasing joing on the black tray.
Once I'd cut and bagged 3 roasts I was left with my 2 hams - and into Hugh's West Country Cider Cure (ooooh aaar) they went the next day. Cider cured roast leg ham is on the menu this Christmas.
LOVELY.
And the best bit? All this pork came from the piggies we were looking after for King Valley Free Range - tasty heritage breeds that have lifed a happy piggie life with room to run around, dig around, wallow, eat apples, acorns and chesnuts, and do all those things piggies like to do.
Sunday, 16 March 2008
Making bacon and gammon - part 2
Today it was time to take the bacon out of the cure. All it needed was a good rinse, and then pat dry with towel. The maple syrup cured bacon then got wrapped in greaseproof paper and into the freezer. The same for one of the standard cure pieces. The other piece I soaked for a few hours (to make it a bit less salty), and then it was dried, into greaseproof paper and into the fridge. We'll be eating this piece over the next week or so.
Yep, it's that easy - why don't you try making your own bacon?

It was also time for the gammon and hock to come out of the cider cure. Don't they look YUMMY? They will soak in clean water for about 24 hours, and then it will be time for part 3.
Yep, it's that easy - why don't you try making your own bacon?
It was also time for the gammon and hock to come out of the cider cure. Don't they look YUMMY? They will soak in clean water for about 24 hours, and then it will be time for part 3.
Saturday, 8 March 2008
Making bacon (again)..part 1
As Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall says, making your own bacon is ridiculously easy and very, very satisfying. He forgot to mention it's addictive!! I haven't bought commercially produced bacon for months now.
Today I made another 2 batches, and have started experimenting with other methods and cures.
I mixed up a cure of brown sugar, salt and maple syrup, then rubbed it into the piece of the pork belly.

Then, the belly went into a zip-lock bag, it was sealed and I put it skin side down on a tray (just in case of leaks as the brine forms. Then it's into the fridge for 4-7 days, turning every day or so to redistribute the brine.

Yep, it really is THAT QUICK AND EASY!!!!!!
Check back in a week to see how it turns out.
Next on the agenda - a cider (ooooh aaar) brine for the piece of gammon ham. Jerry's mouth is positively watering at the thought of home made gammon, egg and chips. Bless 'im. You can take the boy out of England, but you can't take England out of the boy.
Gammon isn't a typical cut that's readily available in Australia, but this is one of the great benefits of having a relationship with the people who produce your food - you can ask for special or unusual cuts. Not only that, but if you're local you can see where and how they live. In this case I know that before they end up on my fork they have lived as happily, as, well, a pig in mud (which they were for a lot of the time!), with treats, back scratches, TLC, and the ability to run around and be pigs. The fact that they are rare/ heritage breed pigs also means the flavour and texture is a world apart from mass-produced pork from the supermarket.
Today I made another 2 batches, and have started experimenting with other methods and cures.
First, start with a piece of pork belly - preferably free range, rare breed pork for extra flavour. I get mine from King Valley Free Range . This piece of belly came from the breed known as a Large Black. Imaginatively named because they are large, and (you guessed it) black. I picked mine up from the market this morning, along with a lovely shoulder roast and a piece of gammon, but that's another story!). I cut the belly into 3 pieces. The first piece was going got the maple syrup treatment.
I mixed up a cure of brown sugar, salt and maple syrup, then rubbed it into the piece of the pork belly.
Then, the belly went into a zip-lock bag, it was sealed and I put it skin side down on a tray (just in case of leaks as the brine forms. Then it's into the fridge for 4-7 days, turning every day or so to redistribute the brine.
Yep, it really is THAT QUICK AND EASY!!!!!!
Check back in a week to see how it turns out.
Next on the agenda - a cider (ooooh aaar) brine for the piece of gammon ham. Jerry's mouth is positively watering at the thought of home made gammon, egg and chips. Bless 'im. You can take the boy out of England, but you can't take England out of the boy.
Gammon isn't a typical cut that's readily available in Australia, but this is one of the great benefits of having a relationship with the people who produce your food - you can ask for special or unusual cuts. Not only that, but if you're local you can see where and how they live. In this case I know that before they end up on my fork they have lived as happily, as, well, a pig in mud (which they were for a lot of the time!), with treats, back scratches, TLC, and the ability to run around and be pigs. The fact that they are rare/ heritage breed pigs also means the flavour and texture is a world apart from mass-produced pork from the supermarket.
Monday, 13 August 2007
Bacon and Ham
This is what my bacon looked like after 5 days in the salt/sugar cure. One thing I did learn is that it needs soaking before cooking - otherwise all you taste is salt!! But after a few hours soaking it's lovely. Next time I'm going to try smoking some - but need to build a smoker...Jerry, get on with that will you?!!
My cider cured ham is also out of its brine bath too - and looking lovely! Now it's hanging in muslin under the verandah for 24-48 hours to air dry a bit. The dogs can smell it but can't reach it - torture!!
Sunday, 5 August 2007
Mmmmmmmmmmmm pork
This post isn't for vegetarians! I got hold of some very tasty heritage breed pork (from a Berkshire pig) from a local supplier , and have embarked on my first ham curing and bacon making experiment.
For the ham I'm curing it in a mix of apple juice/cider/salt/sugar/juniper berries/pepper/bay leaf from a recipe by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall (River Cottage). It's a lovely looking leg ham, so I hope it will tast good. It has 6-7 days in this cider brine .
L: leg in cider brine, and R: weighed down with a bag of rice!
I also bought half a pork belly, a hock and 2 trotters, and I'm salt curing them (mix of salt, brown sugar, pepper and juniper berries (again a River Cottage recipe). The belly will make what I hope will be super tasty streaky bacon, and the hock and trotters will go in lovely winter stews / casseroles to give depth of flavour (and some meat). And all I have to do is drain off the liquid each day for 5 days and rub in new salt mix. Too easy!
And tonight for dinner it's pork ribs!!! Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm lovely.
For the ham I'm curing it in a mix of apple juice/cider/salt/sugar/juniper berries/pepper/bay leaf from a recipe by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall (River Cottage). It's a lovely looking leg ham, so I hope it will tast good. It has 6-7 days in this cider brine .
L: leg in cider brine, and R: weighed down with a bag of rice!
I also bought half a pork belly, a hock and 2 trotters, and I'm salt curing them (mix of salt, brown sugar, pepper and juniper berries (again a River Cottage recipe). The belly will make what I hope will be super tasty streaky bacon, and the hock and trotters will go in lovely winter stews / casseroles to give depth of flavour (and some meat). And all I have to do is drain off the liquid each day for 5 days and rub in new salt mix. Too easy!
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