I let the belly cure for 6 days and every day I flipped and re-distrubuted the honey-cure. After the sixth day I rinsed the honey-cure from the belly and commanded thy belly rest. Then using a process similar to pastrami I spice crusted the belly. For those unfamiliar with the process once a meat is cured in this way and allowed to dry a slightly sticky film forms all over the belly called a pellicle. The sticky film is what the smoke sticks to and in the case of Señor Party in My Mouth I liberally sprinkled crushed chile flakes all over the meaty side of the belly to take advantage of the pellicle. I then pressed onto that about 40 grams of black peppercorns that I had toasted and crushed to a medium-fine grind.
Here's what the belly looked like after the addition of the chile flake
Next is the belly after the crushed black pepper is pressed in and about to find it's way into the smoker. Along with a couple basic cured bellies I'm smoking this deliciousnicity over hickory and applewood pellets using my A-MAZE-IN smoker.
11 hrs in the smoker and a couple days resting in the fridge and voila!
3 comments:
Wow. WOW. This looks incredible and I bet it tastes even better! What kind of chile is that? Did you toast that too?
Thanks Nicole, I appreciate the kind words. I thought about toasting the chile or using a smoked chile like a chipotle but decided I didn't want to overpower the belly with smoke from too many sources. I am going to be looking at alternate chile options moving forward as well as hops (the flavoring a bittering ingredient of beer) or maybe a kimche bacon.
OMG kimchi bacon sounds awesome!
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