Entries Tagged as 'Charcuterie'

Columbus Farm to Fork Naturals Giveaway

20

23.1.13

UPDATE!  Evin of Food Good, Laundry Bad is the winner! YAY! I hope you love your box of meat!

That’s me– looking super cool in my cheesemongering get-up. I learned so much about charcuterie while working at Murray’s Cheese, and even more about cheese of course. During the holiday chaos, I madly ran to the walk-in and fetched Columbus finocchionas and soppresattas and hoisted them onto the meat slicer. My arm would get sore from ballin’ New Yorkers demanding two pounds of thinly sliced Genoa salami. There were fun times behind the cheese counter (like waiting on celebrities and selecting cheeses for Martha Stewart), but I’m thankful to be the customer now. I often find myself buying Columbus products because they’re good value and taste great.

I was thrilled when Columbus offered to send me a sampler and sponsor a giveaway. They recently launched a new line of minimally processed, pre-sliced meats called Farm to Fork Naturals made from hogs and turkeys that have been raised with no antibiotics and 100% vegetarian feeds. The Farm to Fork Naturals line kicks off with three deli meat and four salame varieties. I’m usually suspicious of pre-sliced salami, but this product tastes just as good as meat straight from the deli (believe me, I snacked on tons of freshly cut salami behind that counter).

Farm to Fork Naturals has “no added nitrates or nitrites.”  As someone who dabbles in homemade salami, I immediately inspected the ingredients. Like almost all other “uncured” meats, this new product line eschews sodium nitrate in favor of celery salt, which has naturally occurring nitrites. I’m personally ambivalent about nitrites– I eat them in any form without worries or guilt. There is NO safe way to  make dry-cured sausage without nitrites in some form (and NEVER use celery salt to cure at home please!). If getting your meat preservatives from a more natural source puts your mind at ease, then the Farm to Fork naturals line is a fantastic alternative to other commercial salamis. I really can’t taste the difference.

Leave a comment on this post by this Sunday, January 27th, at 11:59pm CST. I’ll choose a winner at random and announce the results on Monday. This giveaway is only available to readers within the United States. The winner will receive a sampler box of the new Columbus Farm to Fork Naturals line, along with five $5 off coupons. Do it!

Disclaimer: Columbus sent me a sampler box to taste. They are also providing the giveaway prize free of charge.

 

Festa di Salumi: Finocchiona

0

23.12.12

This post is part of the Festa di Salumi from Punk Domestics. It is the last of three projects from Salumi by Michael Ruhlman and Brian Polcyn.

A unifying theme of all salami-making guides is, “you need to be meticulous, you need to pay attention.” Well, that’s just not me.  I have zero interest in building a drying chamber from an old wine fridge. I finally broke down and bought a rack for my milk crate basket after I had done a million bike rides carrying groceries in my backpack. I won’t get the gear until I’ve earned it.

Making salami was similar to making any sausages– I flavored the meat with spices (fennel seed, black pepper, etc.), ground it up, and stuffed it into casings. Except this time sodium nitrite and nitrate were added along with a bacterial culture. I didn’t feel like ordering a bacterial culture, so I took an idea from Peter from Cookblog and added a few tablespoons of brine from my lactofermented sauerkraut.

Then I hung my sausages to dry. From the ceiling fan, no less. I scoffed at the special mold culture you can spray on your aging sausages and felt quite smug when powdery white mold appeared– “baller” mold if you will. “People pay for this mold!” I thought, “but I’m such a great salumier already that it’s just appearing out of thin air!” Then I ignored my salamis for a few days.

The next time I looked at them, the dreaded blue mold had appeared. I had to give my salamis a good scrubbing with white vinegar, but it was a little  late. The mold had penetrated two of them. It wasn’t deadly (this time), but I highly recommend against eating messed-up salami. It tasted most unpleasant. Still, two of the salamis turned out quite good.

So things didn’t go exactly as planned. Here are some pro tips I didn’t read in any of the books:

  • Hang your salamis so there is plenty of air circulation around them. Don’t let the salamis touch each other even if it makes hanging more convenient. The evaporating moisture seems to encourage blue mold growth.
  • Yes, your salami is safe to eat after it’s lost 30% of its starting weight, but the texture improves after its lost 40%. My salami still had an unappealingly soft texture at 30%.
  • Freeze all the meat grinder parts and stainless steel bowl for containing the meat. You can also place the meat itself in the freezer for about 30 minutes. It’s always important to keep everything cold during sausage making, but it’s doubly important for salami. It’s the only way to achieve those lovely chunks of white fat that dot a good salami.

Now I have great respect for legit salami-makers. I’ll need to step up my detail-oriented game for homemade salami to be worthwhile.

Festa di Salumi: Lamb Prosciutto

4

15.12.12

This post is part of the Festa di Salumi from Punk Domestics. It is the second of three projects from Salumi by Michael Ruhlman and Brian Polcyn.

I’m hesitant to call this cured meat “prosciutto.” Taking a recipe from Ruhlman and Polcyn’s Salumi, this dry cured leg of lamb flavored with garlic had an undertone of gaminess and character. There was also a vague jerky quality that was especially prominent after devouring the guanciale, a cut rich with luscious pork fat.

You know the drill by now: I completely covered the meat in salt and garlic slices and placed in the fridge for about two days. Then I rinsed it off thoroughly, patted it dry, and hung it from my ceiling fan. The flesh turned an exceptionally striking purple color.

I’m not sure where Ruhlman gets the eight pound lamb legs he speaks of. My boned out leg weighed in at about three or four pounds, meaning it took less than a month to dry instead of the standard three to four months.  All and all, it was a satisfying charcuterie project, but I’ll probably stick to dry curing pork from now on.

Festa di Salumi: Bucatini all’Amatriciana with Guanciale

2

30.10.12

This post is part of the Festa di Salumi  from Punk Domestics.

As a pasta taskmaster, I’m gonna go out on a limb here.  According to legendary Italian cookbook writer Marcella Hazan, All’amatriciana and bucatini are “as indivisible as Romeo and Juliet. But other couplings of the sauce…can be nearly as successful.” I utterly disagree! Those hollow rope-like bucatini tubes are the only noodles that stand-up to this extraordinary sauce.

Not that making this dish is any trouble– most of the cooking is hands-off. Rendered pork fat amplifies the bright tomatoes and red pepper flakes to create a vibrant synergy. It feels crude adding a dollop of butter to the bubbling tomatoes rich with pork fat and olive oil,  but just do it. It adds creaminess and pleasantly coats your mouth.

Use home cured guanciale if you can. Pancetta is an acceptable substitute but lacks the nutty depth of dried pig jowl. For the love of god, DON’T USE BACON. The smokiness muddies the delicate harmony. The sauce is done after it has simmered for over an hour and pools of oil collect on the surface. Slather the cooked noodles in the sauce, and garnish with crispy guanciale and grated cheese.

My bucatini all’amatriciana recipe will make you swear off stodgy Prego slop on gluey spaghetti forever. Just please take care while making it.

Bucatini all’Amatriciana

  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 3 ounces guanciale, sliced into thin lardons
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons red pepper flakes
  • 1 large onion, diced
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 28-ounce can tomatoes
  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 1 pound bucatini
  • 2 tablespoons Parmigiano-Regianno

1. In a skillet, heat the olive oil over medium heat. When the oil is hot, add the guanciale. Turn the heat up to medium high, and let the guanciale cook for 2 to 3 minutes to get it going, and then turn the heat down to low and let it cook for about 15 minutes or until crispy.

2. Turn the heat down to medium low. Using a slotted spoon, remove 2/3 of the guanciale to a paper towel.

3. Add the diced onion and red pepper flakes and cook, stirring occasionally, for about 10 minutes.

4. Turn the heat up to medium. Add the minced garlic and cook, stirring frequently, for about 2 to 3 minutes.

5.Carefully add the tomatoes to the skillet. Cook on low for 15 minutes.

6. Stir the butter into the simmering tomatoes and mash them with a wooden spoon. Cook on low for another 45 minutes or until pools of oil collect on the surface of the sauce. Serve over cooked bucatini noodles garnished with the crispy guanciale and the cheese.

 

 

Festa di Salumi: Guanciale Is Not Pig Jowl Bacon

7

25.10.12

This post is part of the Festa di Salumi  from Punk Domestics. It is the first of three projects from Salumi by Michael Ruhlman and Brian Polcyn.

My mom recently said, “I haven’t seen any pig jowls at the Stop & Shop recently.” It jolted me back to reality– it’s OK that most people don’t regularly eat guanciale.

Cured pig jowl and I actually only met recently when I lived in New York. Dustin and I had ventured to Bushwick after reading in Edible Brooklyn about a rag-tag gang of hipsters casually throwing together a pizza joint. Roberta’s exuded intimidating coolness: local micro brews, drinks served in Ball jars, locally sourced chickens, rooftop gardens, and piggy bank centerpieces begging for donations to the Brooklyn Grange. It was all so novel at the time.

Another novelty was guanciale listed under the pizza topping options. I timidly asked the server, “um, could you tell me what this is?” pointing to the word on the menu (I didn’t know how to pronounce it). He described it as pig jowl bacon. I wondered, “Doesn’t that come from the face/head area?!” while picturing myself as an Andrew Zimmern-esque nose-to-tail character ordering pizza topped with guanciale and roasted red peppers. It was exhilarating.

Three years later I confronted a raw pig jowl in my own kitchen. It was surprisingly large– similar to any other hunk of pork (I’m no Andrew Zimmern after all).  Following the directions in Michael Ruhlmn and Brian Polcyn’s new Salumi book, I rubbed the pork with tons of salt and black pepper, placed it in a Ziploc bag, and left it in the fridge for a few days.  Then I rinsed it, patted it dry, and hung it from the ceiling fan in the extra bedroom.

Curing meat requires suspension of disbelief. Leaving the flesh of others unrefrigerated for over three weeks feels vaguely shameful. We underestimate salt’s powers to purge meat of moisture and create an environment inhospitable to bacterial growth.

Thinking back to that dinner at Roberta’s, I’d say that bacon comparison was misleading. Yes, guanciale has those familiar white streaks of fat, but it tastes delicately sweet instead of harshly smoky. The application of heat releases the silky fat and echoes the complex flavors of a good Spanish ham.

But the Roberta’s memory did inspire me to recreate that pizza. I’ll try to remember to get off my high horse whenever I eat it.

Pizza with Guanciale and Roasted Eggplant and Summer Squash

  • 1 recipe pizza dough
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 2 ounces guanciale, thinly sliced
  • 1 small eggplant, thinly sliced sliced
  • 1 small summer squash or zucchini, thinly sliced
  • 1/4 medium red onion, thinly sliced
  • 1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 2 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 1/4 cup canned tomatoes
  • 1 or 2 balls fresh mozzarella, sliced

1. Heat the oven to 425°F. Place the olive oil in a skillet and heat over medium high heat. Add the guanciale and stir frequently for several minutes. Then turn down the heat and allow the guanciale to cook for 10 minutes on low. Remove the guanciale pieces to a plate lined with a paper towel. Remove the skillet from heat.

2. After the skillet has cooled, place the eggplant, squash, garlic, and red peppers in the skillet to coat the vegetables with the rendered fat. Season with salt, and then spread the vegetables onto a baking sheet. Place the baking sheet into the oven for 20 to 30 minutes.

3. While the vegetables are roasting, stretch the pizza dough into a circle. Spread with tomato sauce and top with the fresh mozzarella, onion slices, and cooked guanciale.

4. After 20 to 30 minutes, remove the vegetables from the oven and turn the heat up to 500°F. Top the pizza with the roasted vegetables. Place the pizza in the oven after it reaches 500°F– it needs to be screaming hot! Bake for 8 to 10 minutes. Scatter parsley over the top of the pizza after removing it from the oven and then serve.

 

 

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