Canadian Bacon

Air dried cured meat and salami recipes

Canadian Bacon

Postby sawhorseray » Wed Sep 24, 2014 10:02 pm

Found some whole pork loin at $2.29 lb., about the best I can do these days. Made up my CB brine:
16 lbs. pork loin
6 qts. ice water
1&1/2 cup salt
1 cup powdered dextrose
4&1/2 tbsp. cure #1
1 ounce Mapleine
Cut the loins in half so each was about four pounds in green weight and injected each piece with six ounces of the brine solution, then covered the loins with the remaining brine and gave them a five day fridge nap. Tossed them into the Pro 100 to dry for a couple of hours at 100º, then put in a pan of damp applewood and raised the temp to 110ºfor the next eight hours. Changed the chip pan and raised the temp to 135º for the next five hours, then removed the pan, closed the vents, and raised the smoker temp to 175º. 21 hours total in the Pro 100 got me to a internal temperature of 150º, the load got pulled.
Image
Let things cool on the counter for a few hours before going into the fridge overnight
Image
Next day got everything vac-sealed and ready for the freezer
Image
The Eggs Benedict were out of this world, tonight will be CB pizza with pineapple. RAY
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Re: Canadian Bacon

Postby sawhorseray » Wed Sep 24, 2014 10:03 pm

Seems I'm gonna have to work on downsizing my pics a bit! RAY
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Re: Canadian Bacon

Postby wheels » Wed Sep 24, 2014 11:36 pm

Ray, I know, it's really annoying.

If you can, use a photo editor to optimise (optimize) the pics to 600 - 700 pixels wide.

What's Mapleine? And, I'd love to know more about the Pro 100.

Phil
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Re: Canadian Bacon

Postby sawhorseray » Thu Sep 25, 2014 6:26 am

Thanks Wheels, I think I can figure out how to get the pics shrunk down to the proper size now!

Mapleine is a maple syrup concentrate, a two ounce bottle makes 27 pints of maple flavored syrup. I use it in ham and CB brines and when I make batches of my maple-apple breakfast sausage, kids just seem to love the stuff.

The Pro 100 is a commercial grade smoker-roaster made by PS Seasonings out of Iron Gate Wisconsin. It was made for Cabelas, where I bought mine a few years back, and sold as the Cabelas Pro 100 SS commercial grade smoker. I love the thing! I'm a sausage stuffer and this unit has never let me down. It also does a fantastic job with the wild hog hams I smoke along with the smoked chickens and turkeys I produce. I can flip a switch and it goes from 625 watts to 1250 watts and is a perfect roaster for six hour pork ribs, pulled pork roasts, and does a unbelievable job on prime rib. Mine came in a black exterior from Cabelas which I believe is no longer available, I got it on sale for $1199 and free shipping at the time. Here's the link, I also use their 260-B Italian sausage seasoning mix, it's a family favorite and I haven't been able to come close to the great flavor by mixing my own spices, and I've tried many times.

https://www.psseasoning.com/index.cfm/a ... ct_id/3412

Fact is today I smoked a half dozen turkey legs for my wife in the Pro 100, the pic didn't turn out , too dark. I made a brine that I use for whole chickens and turkey that my guru from a former site that I frequented gave to me.
2 gallons ice water
1 gallon 7-up (yes, the soft drink)
2 & 1/4 cups powdered dextrose
1 & 1/2 cups canning salt
1 cup Instacure #1
Geeze the bird with 10% of their green weight and cover with the rest of the solution overnight.Preheat smoker to 110 degrees F; open damper 3/4. Hang product in stockinettes (no parts touching).Insert temperature probe into ball socket joint, but not touching bone.Run at this temperature for 1 hour.Increase thermostat to 125 degrees F; place 1/3 pan sawdust (moistened) on burner.After 4 hours place another 1/3 pan of moistened sawdust on burner. Increase temperature to 140 degrees F. Close dampers.After 4 hours remove sawdust pan; increase temperature to 185 degrees F.Heat at this temperature until internal temperature reaches 165 degrees F.Turn OFF thermostat and let cool to 100 degrees F.
You will not believe how flavorful and juicy the finished product is, it's made me a legend in my crowd of friends. It's not my recipe, it was given to me by someone who shares info and asks nothing in return. Try it once with whole chickens or a whole turkey, you'll be happy with the results. RAY
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Re: Canadian Bacon

Postby sawhorseray » Thu Sep 25, 2014 7:20 am

Lets try this pic

Image

By George I've got it!!!
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Re: Canadian Bacon

Postby badjak » Thu Sep 25, 2014 9:41 am

Those look so much better than the one I made recently!

I will start picking your brain once I got around doing another one.
Gotta say: I am pretty jealous of you having a smoker like that :lol:
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Re: Canadian Bacon

Postby wheels » Thu Sep 25, 2014 4:19 pm

Many thanks sawhorseray. That looks a serious bit of kit.

Phil
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