If you've ever eaten in a high falootin' Italian restaurant you've no doubt seen "bresaola" served with Parmigiano shavings, maybe some rucola/rocket/arugola salad, some nice oil and lemon juice.
Bresaola is a great cured meat. It isn't made from pork, which is uncommon as far as salumi go; it is made from beef, or also, quite commonly in Italy, horse or donkey. Basically a very lean piece of meat (most commonly beef, especially if bought commercially) is salt cured with spices, then dried.
Sliced thin it makes a superb antipasto when drizzled with a mixture of oil, lemon juice and black pepper, it great in a sandwich, and is delicious just eaten out of hand. This is one salume people worried about cholesterol and fat don't have to feel guilty about eating.
So lets get to how it can be made at home. Now, given the preliminary results of the survey, I'm going to post this without having tasted the results. This means my spices could be entirely out of whack. This is unlikely as I've made this before, but it might happen!Ingredient Quantity(g) % of Meat Eye of round 1537 100% Salt ( Kosher) 78 5% Sugar 15 1% Black pepper 7.6 0.5% Fresh rosemary 3.5 0.25% Juniper berries 1.7 0.1% Dry thyme 1.5 0.1% Cinnamon 0.8 0.05% Clove 0.4 0.025% Cure #2 5.15 0.33%
I started with 3 whole eye of round roasts (each one weighed about 1.5kg/3.5lbs). I made sure there was no surface fat or silver skin anywhere. You want the meat nice and clean, a solid block of meat. I like this cut because of the shape and size. It lends itself well to being put into casings.
Mix up the spice mixture after grinding the cinnamon, clove, and juniper berries, chopping up the rosemary and crushing the black peppercorns.Make sure you really mix everything up, especially if you're making a double or triple batch for 2 or 3 pieces of meat, as I did.
Take the mixture and really massage it into the meat. You really want to get the meat and salt nicely worked into it. This should take 1 or 2 minutes, don't do it for 15; this isn't a cow spa!
Take you piece of meat and put it into a ziplock bag, including all the salt and spices that fell off it while massaging it. Get out as much air as possible from the bag, and seal it up. Put it in the fridge for 15-21 days.
Massage the meat while it is in the bag every 2 or 3 days, flipping it to make sure it is getting even exposure to the liquid which will have formed in the bag.
This method can be used on many lean pieces of beef. My notes from 2005 tell me I used a rump roast once. As long as the piece is nice and large, somewhat regularly shaped and LEAN, you should be able to use it. Actually, now that I think about it, I'm not sure why it HAS to be lean. I imagine a nicely marbled piece of beef would taste pretty good cured! But, as I've said, i like the eye of round, as it is a good size and shape.
Normally I'd use 1/2 eye of round roasts which are commonly found at markets, but this time i found whole ones. Either way, just scale the formula as needed by weight.
I'll be back in about a week to detail the casing and hanging. I'll be using 100mm casings for this.
Monday, November 26, 2007
Bresaola - Curing
Posted by
Jasonmolinari
at
6:09 PM
Labels: Cured meat : Solid muscles, Cured meat : Solid muscles - Recipe
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18 comments:
Hi this sounds interesting to try but I have a question.
I was wondering whether it is really safe to have the plastic bag in contact with meat and salt for so long. Isn't there a danger of harmful plastic molecules contaminating the meat?
Could this be done using a glass container instead?
Thanks!
Sure you could do it in a glass container, and massage and turn the meat every few days.
I have no idea about plastic molecules and salt really. I never even thought about it.
Thanks!
Hi Jason,
Can you help me understand what the casing does for this preperation? I noticed that the Ruhlman/Polcyn differs in that there is no casing....just tied and hung.
Thanks.
The casing helps slow down the drying a little bit, and also keeps the developing molds away from the meat. You COULD do it without the casing, in fact i think i've done it a couple times, but i have to check my notes about what i thought about it.
I remember preferring it with the casing.
i guess it is a personal preference.
Venison would work?
Gadgetgeek: Yes, i think venison would be fantastic!
The only concern, is that i was told or read somewhere that wild venison (hunted) is prone to parasites, and i have no idea if like trichinae these parasites are killed by freezing and salt.
Can you please tell me what is cure #2?
Thank you
I found a number of studies suggesting that annato has a very solid antibacterial effect. For those of us who prefer simpler ingredients to the more processed ones, this may be a viable alternative for cure #2. Annato also has a smell/flavor similar to clove and cinnamon. I will post on the final product.
Also, can you post the quantities or the ingredients in more common measures, like tsp and Tbs? I don't have a scale, so I just winged it on quantity.
Sam, the quantities of most ingredients in teaspoons and tablespoons can be found on Len's page:
http://lpoli.50webs.com/Tips.htm#Spices
I recommend getting a scale though. I got mine on ebay for about $10. Small scale, 0.1g resolution.
If you love bresaola you should take a look at renieri.net although it would be better taste it ;)
After reading that page i'm very hungry Renieri!
I am doing some this eye of round, but i found out that the bags after two days, start be filled with gas, i looked at the meat and the accumulated juices and everything look normal. is this normal for little gas production during curing? i followed ur recipe with everything
juice production is normal...but i've never seen or noticed gas production...i can't think of any reason why that would be a good thing though..i might be a little concerned.
It isn't a lot of gas, but there is now a gas pocket inside the bag+juices+spices+meat ... i was worry, because gas production means fermentation of somehow, and this could lower pH if it is a good bacteria, or bad one means the meat is rotting.. but it is likely the good one, as there is salt...
"Isn't there a danger of harmful plastic molecules contaminating the meat?"
No, plastics only produce harmful carcinogens at temperatures at or above something like 700 degrees Fahrenheit, or that was what my reading on Johns Hopkins said... also if your fridge is that warm you probably shouldn't be curing meats anyways.
"I imagine a nicely marbled piece of beef would taste pretty good cured!"
Beef fat has a tendency to go rancid, I think that I have read somewhere that it is not as stable as pork fat due to a difference in cell structure but I can't say for sure - however cured or jerked beef should usually considered best if it is as lean as possible.
edit - "is usually considered best..."
i had read the same thing regarding beef fat, but when i made a ribeye bresaola, it turned out amazingly delicious.
http://curedmeats.blogspot.com/2012/08/ribeye-roast-bresaola.html
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