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A Traditional Guide to Salting, Brining, and Curing Meats at Home
Introduction to Preserving
Freezing
Making Quick Pickles
Making Quick Jams: Refrigerator or Freezer Jam
Vinegars
Water-Bath Canning
How to Can Tomatoes
How to Can Pickles
How to Can Jam and Jelly
Drying
Salting and Brining
Fermenting
ridiculous instructions up there.
brine your pork and keep it just above freezinf.
sweetheart, raw pork will keep a long long time at 36f to 38f. no need to buy 12 pounds at a time and salt it down when there's an area in your house (ooooh like a fridge) where the temperature is always nicely between 36f and 38f.
What temperature should brine be added to chilled fresh meat (36F) so that temperature of fresh meat is not elevated above 40F? When I use tap water it takes a long time to get meat below 50+F
"Crush together ¼ cup whole juniper berries, 2 tablespoons whole allspice, 1 tablespoon black peppercorns, and ¼ pickling salt. Each day for two weeks press about 2 teaspoons of the spice mixture onto the surface of the meat and return, covered, to a cold place."
1/4 ??? pickling salt
I read the article about salting and using brine for meats. My question is how do you store the meat afterwards? With the brine it just says what to do for 4 weeks. How is it stored after the 4 week process?
Thanks
I'm curious why salted pork cannot be frozen. Is it over concern for the texture? Or is there a health-related reason?
I realize these are old timey recipes for preserving meat .... but my refrigerator doesn't get down to 36 degrees. Anyone have a method of preserving meat at normal temperatures - like summer or fall in the southeast?
My parents used this process a lot but they are gone now. Do you have a recipe for this process? They used to do this wiith beef, pork, chicken, fish.....most all kinds of meat and it would stay good for years.
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