Difficulty: Moderate
== * Salt * Cooling racks * Fan * Wood * Smoker * Hanger for the smoker * Meatslicer Step1 Beef bacon is made out of the steers belly meat. This is the fat part of the belly region closest to the animal's flank area. After slaughtering the steer you will want to get the belly meat into a refrigerator right away. The best bacon is made out of meat that has been chilled at 42 degrees F for 24 hours before it is cured. Before refrigerating the meat, you should trim it into a square shape; this will make it easier to handle.
Step2 Cure the meat. The easiest way to cure the belly meat is a method called wet curing. Wet curing is accomplished when the meat is dipped into a brine that is made out of salt and sugar solution. Once the meat is completely submersed in the brine, let it soak for 3 to 4 days. The salt removes the moisture from the belly meat and the sager ads flavor. When you are curing the bacon you must make sure that the temperature remains at a constant 38 degrees F. If the temperature drops below that, the curing process will be halted, and if it gets any warmer the meat will spoil.
Step3 Once the beef bacon has sat in the brine for three to four days, pull it out of the refrigerator and rinse it off with cold water. Once the meat has been hosed off, dry it. The simplest way to dry the belly meat is to lay it out on some cooling racks and let a simple house fan blow across the meat. You will know that the bacon is sufficiently dried when a thick shiny coating appears on the top of the meat. This coating is called a pellicle and is basically the hardening brine. The pellicle will help the bacon absorb some flavor while it is being smoked. The bacon should be sufficiently dried within an hour.
Step4 Now that the bacon is dried, it's time to smoke it. In order to smoke the bacon you will need chips of hardwood and the type of wood you select will affect the bacon's flavor. Maple will give the meat a sweet taste, cherry will infuse it with a fruity flavor and hickory is what gives meat a good hearty flavor. Before you start the smoker, hang the slaps of beef bacon in the smoker.
Step5 When you are smoking beef bacon, you will get the best flavor if you keep the temperature inside your smoker between 80 degrees F and 100degrees F. Smoke the beef bacon for approximately eight hours.
Step6 After the bacon has been smoked. it is ready to be sliced. Although you can slice the bacon by hand, the most efficient method is to use a meat slicer.
Step7 After slicing the beef bacon you should keep it vacuumed wrapped and in your freezer until you are ready to cook it.
Query:
I thought Bacon was made from pork. To me this seems like asking "how do I make potato rice?"
Reply would be "you can not, rice is rice, and potatoes are potatoes."
You can of course make "cured smoked beef".
Bacon Raw beef ham is a joint of beef treated like bacon hence "HAM" but its beef
No because beef bacon and pastrami are made differently.
Unless Bacon is made from SOYBEANS, Bacon is Not a Vegetable, Bacon is a Meat, usually made from PORK, turkey, or beef.
People will have different opinions. My favorite is bacon, but BBQ beef are good, too.I would choose the bacon flavored noodles.
- No - nope they are not. _ no.
Dr. Oz on Oprah - Pork Bacon is healthier, Turkey Bacon is extremely high in sodium though they are the same in calories.From:Eat This Not That! Supermarket Survival Guide: The No-diet ...David Zinczenko
Traditionally, bacon was made from pork, but now there is also turkey bacon and beef bacon. Morningstar farms also makes a vegetarian bacon.
bacon and cabbage
Bacon is a generic term for some cuts of pig meat and pig = pork.
roast beef, bacon, steak, and eggs.
There is no such thing. Pork comes from pigs and beef is cow meat, two entirely different animals. It is, however, possible that a badly punctuated recipe meant to refer to a mixture of ground pork and ground beef.
Western Beef has over 300 stores in the USA in almost every state. They are great beef manufactures and salesmen. They sell beef,pork,bacon and other forms of great beef.