Culinary Adventures, Eats
Comments 11

Make Bacon

After reading the book Heat by Bill Buford, I’ve dreamed of curing my own pork. Curing meat uses salt to draw out the moisture and this allows the meat to last much longer. When the apocalypse that we’re all waiting for hits, we might need low tech techniques like these to make our food go further. Maybe. In the meantime, there’s nothing wrong with home made bacon just for fun.

Traditionally, pig slaughter takes place in autumn, after a summer of fattening up and curing begins at this time of year too. The work is generally done outside and needs cooler temperatures to keep the meat happy. Winter is too cold in many parts of the world to work outdoors, so Autumn is the perfect season. Also, in the northern hemisphere, the holiday season follows soon after autumn and there is much appreciation of pork over the festive feast period. Christmas ham anyone?

I’ve always loved the idea of curing/brining my own bacon. I wasn’t sure if I was going to smoke it too since I know nothing about smoke, but from my research, the extra step was well worth it and regarded by bacon curers as a requirement of home made bacon. So, I  decided to attempt smoking my bacon. I’ve never smoked anything. Well, any food.

I bought the largest piece of free range bacon I could find. The Freedom Farm slab of pork belly wasn’t that big at all, I was hoping for a kilo piece but I had to make do with 800 grams.

I mixed 1/4 cup of the cure that I procured online, with a 1/4 cup of non-iodised table salt and a 1/8th cup of brown sugar. I rubbed the pork belly all over and shoved it into a ziplock back and chucked it into the fridge. I flipped it once a day and after 2 days, I took it out, drained the liquid that had come out of it, rubbbed more cure into the meat and bagged it into the fridge for another 3 days. I disposed of the bag and cure, washed the pork belly and left it under a slow running tap for one hour. Then I drained the water and put the meat into a sieve and put it into a bowl to catch any drips. I refrigerated this over night. At this stage, this is pretty much cured meat. The next, better stage is smoke.

I don’t have a smoker so I concocted a makeshift stovetop and oven smoker that used a lot of tinfoil, a roasting tray, a drying rack and woodchips.

I cut my pork belly in half and only smoked one half because I wasn’t sure if it would turn out right. 4 hours of smoking did the trick but my technique is far from perfect so I won’t be sharing it until I know what I’m doing.

I really, wish there was more bacon.

My home made bacon was turned into:

  1. Bacon and egg quiche
  2. Carbonara
  3. Bacon sandwiches

My bacon making tips for next time:

  1. Wash bacon for longer – maybe two hours.
  2. Order a larger piece of pork belly. At least 1 kilo (2 pounds).
  3. Smoke the whole slab.
  4. Try maple syrup. Maybe even smoke the bacon with maple?
  5. Heat the woodchips for longer. Get a real smoke going. Don’t be afraid of smoking it too much.
  6. Try just stove top rather than oven. Possibly, using a tall pot like a dutch oven and a rack for more distance between meat and heat.

11 Comments

    • Bunny Eats Design says

      Thanks Dan, first time through it didn’t yield quite enough for the effort, but next time I would have the confidence to start with more meat. It is the same amount of work no matter how much you make so more is definitely more!

  1. I’m with Keeping Up With The Holsbys, very impressive indeed, Genie! I have often thought about making my own bacon, and perhaps your post is just the ticket to get me to actually do it. That is a beautifully smoked piece of pork. One of the treats my family used to have during a BBQ is to cut the bacon a bit thicker than normal (maybe 2mm) and BBQ it, slap it on a piece of french stick and chow down. What fond memories that brings back.
    Quite impressive recipe, indeed.
    I hope you have a lovely weekend.

    • Bunny Eats Design says

      Lol, my knife skills have a long way to go, so without a dedicated slicer, thick slices on the BBQ sounds great to me!

  2. Looks incredible! I am so impressed that you made your own bacon and smoked it too!

    For a first-time smoker, it sounds like you did a really good job improvising. I have to try this. Who would have thought it would be so easy?

    • Bunny Eats Design says

      Thanks Baconbiscuit! I am amazed there was so little work involved too.

  3. Hey Genie – looks fantastic. Can I borrow this post and put it on Meateaters, with a link back to you of course? Interested to know where you bought your cure. Was it the standard ‘pink salt’?

    I’ve started buying Little Wolf dried pork – I can eat it til the cows come home, or the pigs. You can buy it at the Chaffers Market (for Wellingtonians).

    Cheers
    Alan

    • Bunny Eats Design says

      Hi Alan, I love Meateaters! You can put my post on Meateaters with a link back. My cure was bought off Trademe. If you search “bacon cure” you will get plenty of hits.

      I thought we had eaten all our bacon but last night I found a little parcel of diced home made bacon in my freezer. I’m sure that will make a great bacon soup sometime this winter!

  4. if you have a giant wok, I’ve seen a show where they had wood chips at the bottom on alu, a steamer rack above with a duck and a huge lid (sealed with a towel around) for smoking!

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