from Zak Pelaccio's Eat with Your Hands:
- 6 ounces Sichuan peppercorns
- 2 1/2 ounces whole black peppercorns
- 1/2 pound kosher salt
- 5 ounces palm sugar (3 1/3 rounds gula jawa) or 6 2/3 tablespoons brown sugar
- One 12-pound Berkshire pork belly, skin removed [I got my hands on an 8-pound slab at Whole Foods]
Lots of peppercorns. Toast and grind them in batches.
Sichuan peppercorns are actually not peppercorns at all but is a member of the citrus family.
Sichuan peppercorns are actually not peppercorns at all but is a member of the citrus family.
Gula jawa is at least according to Pelaccio and Wikipedia is supposed to be palm sugar. I bought something labelled gula jawa at Super 88 since it appeared to be a better value. However what I bought is made of coconut and cane sugar.
I seem to be doing a bit better when it comes to skinning this time around.
Though I got a bit sloppier with the fat caps toward the end.
Applying the cure.
Stacking them in the fridge to cure. Zak Pelaccio suggests 5 days; I assume waiting until next weekend won't hurt.
Hickory and cherry wood chips. I never opened the bag of cherry ones.
Getting the smoker going.
The pork belly after being smoked for 6 hours. It was disappointingly jiggly while I handled it (adding more chips or flipping it skin-side down for the last 2 hours). Unlike my initial experience I achieved negligible moisture loss even after applying the old leftover cure I had.All of it resulting in meat that at its thickest points are still pink and a fat cap that hasn't really experienced the magic. All of those spices are very vague and skin-deep.
Might just do it Tom Mylan's way next time, but there's $50 worth of pork belly in the fridge I have to work through. Some bits of it are still quite good. Particularly the smoked meat. Not so much the fat.
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