American Medium Mrs. F.L. Gillette

To Cure English Bacon

Original Recipe

This process is called the "dry cure," and is considered far preferable to the New England or Yankee style of putting prepared brine or pickle over the meat. First the hog should not be too large or too fat, weighing not over two hundred pounds, then after it is dressed and cooled cut it up into proper pieces; allow to every hundred pounds a mixture of four quarts of common salt, one quarter of a pound of saltpetre and four pounds of sugar. Rub this preparation thoroughly over and into each piece, then place them into a tight tub or suitable cask; there will a brine form of itself from the juices of the meat, enough at least to baste it with, which should be done two or three times a week; turning each piece every time. In smoking this bacon, the sweetest flavor is derived from black birch chips, but if these are not to be had, the next best wood is hickory; the smoking with corn-cobs imparts a rank flavor to this bacon, which is very distasteful to English people visiting this country. It requires three weeks or a month to smoke this bacon properly. Berkshire Recipe.

Ingredients

grocery
  • 2 hundred pounds
  • 1 mixture of four quarts of common salt
  • 1 quarter of a pound of saltpetre and four pounds of sugar
  • 1 tight tub or suitable cask
  • 1 brine form of itself from the juices of the meat
  • 1 two or three times a week
  • 1 rank flavor to this bacon
  • 3 weeks or a month to smoke this bacon properly

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Instructions

  1. 1

    This process is called the "dry cure," and is considered far preferable to the New England or Yankee style of putting prepared brine or pickle over the meat.

  2. 2

    First the hog should not be too large or too fat, weighing not over two hundred pounds, then after it is dressed and cooled cut it up into proper pieces; allow to every hundred pounds a mixture of four quarts of common salt, one quarter of a pound of saltpetre and four pounds of sugar.

  3. 3

    Rub this preparation thoroughly over and into each piece, then place them into a tight tub or suitable cask; there will a brine form of itself from the juices of the meat, enough at least to baste it with, which should be done two or three times a week; turning each piece every time.

  4. 4

    In smoking this bacon, the sweetest flavor is derived from black birch chips, but if these are not to be had, the next best wood is hickory; the smoking with corn-cobs imparts a rank flavor to this bacon, which is very distasteful to English people visiting this country.

  5. 5

    It requires three weeks or a month to smoke this bacon properly. _Berkshire Recipe_.

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