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Looks really good! Just curious, why trim the pork butt and add beef fat back? Consistency through cooking? We just did a batch of brats with 100% elk and added pure pork fat. Seemed even better and cheaper than cutting in pork shoulder.
Quote from: Brushcrawler on June 17, 2019, 08:17:14 PMLooks really good! Just curious, why trim the pork butt and add beef fat back? Consistency through cooking? We just did a batch of brats with 100% elk and added pure pork fat. Seemed even better and cheaper than cutting in pork shoulder.I think the pork fat is great but in my salami and summer sausage the texture and particle separation is important and I like beef suet ground up (small chunks you see in salami etc). I don't use it in my really skinny snack stix/pepperoni like casings smaller in diameter than 16mm because those small chunks don't like to pass that tiny stuffing tube. What I have found is I always start out the product in the smoker with no smoke until the meat sweats for an hour or two. Then I add smoke for a couple hours and cut that off. It's like getting a pelicle formed on salmon before you add smoke. Smoke and moisture don't mix well and tastes like c...p. I start out at 100 or 120 and slowly work my way up to 160 internal. Takes most the day but the product turns out way better taking your time. Most meat shops have those big industrial smokers and they set those and run them all night . I think people do their stuff too quick, and actually "cook" their stuff and that's not what you are trying to do. Prague #1 or pink salt is important for safety and quality/texture etc. It's as much about process as it is ingredients for me.