Cold Smoked Meat with the Hillbilly Hamhouse

The hillbilly ham house hootenanny concludes today. Catch up on Part One: Why Build a Hillbilly Hamhouse and Part Two: How to Construct a Hillbilly Hamhouse. hillbilly ham house packaged products

So there she was, in all her glory. I ran her for a couple weekends to churn out some smoked meat to give away for Christmas. I poked me a thermometer thru the tinfoil a few times to check’er, and she was about 100 dee-grees, and that book on smokin’ meat—charcoalabalooza or somesuch name, it had—ennyway, I had Rachel read parts of it to me and it said 100 de-grees is about right.

I hadda go buy me some fish to smoke—they’s not bitin’ down at the crick, and them’s all got like two heads and talk funny and what-not ennyway, I ‘spect that comes from livin’ in the run-off of the coal-mine down the way, that’s a whole different story-- but in true Mr. Tayse Christmas fashion, I foun’ me some pig roastin’ meat in the freezer, and made me up some o’ that good ol’ Canadian backbacon.

hillbilly ham house labels

And, durned if that hillbilly hamhouse didn’t turn out some of the best durned backbacon and smoked salmon ever I laid a tooth to, even usin’ that ol’ oak that fell down two years ago for the smokin’ firewood instead o’ some fancy aldermanwood or whatever. Kinda tasted like some o’ that fancy wine they get outta Californi-a, that chardocuternnay or whatever, that kind all them pussies what drink white wine call “oaky”…

hillbilly ham house with sign

That son-in-law o’ mine, he brought out a sign fer the hillbilly hamhouse, so’s them’s seein’ it fer the first time’d know what she was, but me, I figger if you dunno by lookin’ what she is, you’re dumber than I is. But I’m right proud o’ that ol’ hamhouse, it dresses up the neighborhood, besides makin’ good eats.

I’m thinkin’ ‘bout mebbe expandin’ on it. I been wantin’ to smoke a whole hog, now. I gots me this ol’ chevy up on blocks out back, an’ I figger if set fire to that rustbucket, you know, to get rid o’ the plastic and stuff inside, then I could pipe the ol’ barbecue smoke down the hill into that chevy. I reckon could sit me a whole hog up in the driver’s seat to smoke, now there’d be a sight to please any hilljack—it’d be lak that ol’ hog’s drivin’ along in a cloud o’ smoke, mebbe I’d put a pregnant Winston in ‘is mouth just for show—and when he’s done, we’d have us some good eats too…

Constructing the Hillbilly Hamhouse

Rachel's dad Mitch is contributing to the blog this week with his Mark Twain-esque story about making a hillbilly ham house. Start with Part 1 where he reasons out why to engage in the project. Today's part 2 reviews the construction process.hillbilly ham house construction Fer me, makin’ Christmas presents has jest one rule—I gotta use stuff I got aroun’ the house. I’s not spose to go roun’ buyin’ special tools an’ such. But that ain’t no big thang aroun’ my place—I saves me ‘bout ennythin’ a body’d ever need. I figger one day my life’ll depend on me makin’ me a washin’ machine or somethin’ outta the scrapwood, sheetmetal, and electric motors lyin’ roun’, and I’ll be set.

I already had me a durn good barbecue pit, so’s all’s I gone do was rig me up somethin’ to give that smoke fu’ther to go, a smoke-stack, to chill that smoke down, so i’d not be cookin’ that meat, but smokin’ it. Then I had to come up wi’ the house, somethin’ big enuf to lay the meat in, at t’other end.

For the stack, I’s thinkin’ I’d use me some o’ that CPVC tube I been savin’, fer when I put me in some indoor plumbin’. But I ain’t no dumbbell, whatever the little woman says, and I knowed that tube might likely melt, up near the pit end anyway. Plus, I done worked with that tube before, and turnin’ corners and glue and cuttin’ and all…sounded like more work than this ol’ briarhopper’s signin’ up fer. Then I lit on this ideer of usin’ tinfoil—it orta cool that smoke right quick, an’ I gots me a pile of it already—or the little woman do, anyway, an’ she won’ miss it.

That ol’ tinfoil tho’, I did ‘low it wouldn’t hold up by hisself. But I keeps chickenwire aroun’, jest in case I need to ketch me sum critters or whatnot, so’s I hacked me off a coupl hunks o’ that chickenwire and took to wrappin’ it roun’ a piece o’ that ol’ CPVC, for to get me that tee-yoobyoo-lahr shape on that chickenwire , don’t y’ know. Then I took an’ slid that ol’ chickenwire off that CPVC, slick as u please, and commenced to bendin’ it and crimpin’ it to itself, till I got me bout’ half the bend I was wantin’. I done that whol’ thang again with t’other hunk o’ that ol’ chickenwire, an’ I hooked them two pieces up together, crimpin’ them little hexie mesh bits down t’ each other, till I had me a tube lookin’ kinda like a P-trap under a sink (if I had me a sink, that is), maybe six feet long and ‘bout 3 or 4 inches wide.

I’s ‘bout ready to slap together some kinda box to be the hamhouse, mebbe some 1x2’s or 2x2’s knocked together and covered with more o’ that tinfoil, when my eyes lit on an ol’ roastin’ pan, ‘r box, ‘r whatever y’ call it, covered, sheet aluminum, a nice piece, what we’d not used in y’ars. Fact is, I’d bought it at a church ga-rage sale way back when, and the little woman never wanted to use it. It’s a big ol’ thing, only good for turkeys ‘r hams r such. Turns out when she cook them turkeys she likes to leave ‘m up open an’ uncovered most o’ the time anyway. Says she get better skin that way. Well, I reckon so. I sure gots no complaints where my vittles is concerned, I eats right good for an ol’ briar, so I’ll leave it up to her.

Ennyway I took me this ol’ covered roaster and figgered it’d finally get some use. The onliest problem I had was how to hook that there smokestack tube to this roastin’ box I had. I kept starin’ at that thang, wondering if I should maybe drill me some holes and’ hog ‘em out till they’s a big enough hole fer the stack, or mebbe try a hacksaw. I’s about ready to just beat on the thang with a hammer, that allus works good for most thangs.

Then I had me another ideer, and here’s whar another Christmas tradishyun come in—I allus have to borry some tools from my son-in-law Alex. Sometimes I even axe ‘im first ‘fore I takes ‘em. This time I stole a coupla hole saws. I chucked the bigger one—3 or 4 incher I dunno—and commenced to cuttin’ on the bottom of that roastin’ box.

Man I’ll tell you what, that steel cuttin’ tool went thru that aluminum like my ol’ clasp-knife slicin’ a sausage, and I was hummin’ and feelin’ good, like a pig in slop, why I’s just as pleased as I could be. Then that ol’ hole saw done cut thru on just a teeny little spot, and that drill she done grabbed that roastin’ pan and ripped it clean outta my hands. Yeah, I’m tellin’ y’ what, it like to busted my wrist-bones, right that, and that roastin’ box flew by my knee goin’ like sixty. I’s commencin’ to cussin’ a blue streak, an’ felt my ol’ wrist throbbin’ like I’d been muckin’ out stalls all day, but I picked him back up off that floor and I kep’ at it. That ol’ box, y’d think he was an ol’ catfish I’s guttin’, the way he shook and whined and twisted and bounced aroun’. Ennyway it did finally cut enough I could punch thru, an’ I had me the hole I’s wantin’.

hillbilly ham house smoke entrance

Now it was time to hang this whole thang together so’s I could get to smokin’ me some meat. I wired that stack right up to the chimney pipe o’ that barbecue pit out on m’ back deck, and I lay that stack along the top of the deck rail. I snugged that hamhouse right up ag’in that ol’ chickenwire stack. I drilled me a few holes to take a few sheetmetal screws into that hamhouse, right up nex’ ter that hole I done cut out o’ it, like maybe at the 90-degree spots around the circle, about a quarter-inch from the hole. I wrestled that ol’ chickenwire stack thru the hole so’s I had an inch ‘r two of it stickin’ thru, and I bent it back like the bell on my ol’ pal Glenn’s trumpet, so’s I could screw it down to the hamhouse from the inside. I used a couple washers to glom onto that chickenwire a little better, but I di’n’t worry much bout it—it aint lak I’s fixin’ to put enny load on it, it ‘uz just to keep it hangin’ together..

Then that ol’ hamhouse wanted to move around. Yes it did, I sw’ar! It wuz gonna fall off the deck, or tip that good ol’ meat off into the woodpile or somethin’. I sw’ar that ol’ hamhouse, he ‘bout alive, the way he fought me and fought me…ennway, that deck what I’s workin’ on, the one on the back o’ my house? Well, it’s a downright tradgedy, is what it is, it’s so old and fallin’ apart, I figgered what’s one more mess on’t. I coulda done somethin’ purty like build me a nice OSB shelf on it—I done used that stuff to make that front door, don’t y’know, and it looks right nice there once I used a couple leftover cans o’ Rustoleum to cover up the saw marks. But that ol’ deck, it needs burned down or somethin’, and I ain’t about to spend time makin’ it look purty. Ennywho, to make a short story long, as it were, I just drilled a coupla more holes in the bottom of that hamhouse and jammed a coupla drywall screws right into the top rail o’ that ol’ deck, and thar he sat, tight down to that deck.

Then I commenced to wrappin’ that stack up with that tinfoil. I reckoned it’d cool’at smoke right down, and I foun’ out later I warn’t wrong on that too. I wrapped a few spots what looked like they’d leak some with that briarhopper band-aid, duct tape, but I warn’t too worried bout’t. In fact, I’s worry’tin about the fire gettin’ enuf draft, is what I was worry’tin about. I had it figgered if it wouldn’ draft good, I’d just rig me up a fan outta one o’ them ol’ cornpewters I keep lyin’ around fer just that reason, but I’s still a lazy ol’ hillbilly and I’s happy to leave that off if I could, and a few leaks here and there would help her to draft good, I figgered.

blackened glass lifts in DIY cold smoker

An’ so it was, in th’end—one I had her all wired up I started a fire in th’ ol’ pit, and sure enuf, she drew just fine. That hillbilly hamhouse, she filled up with smoke till it’d make yer eyes water, I sw’ar. Last thang I did wasta take and put in a couple ol’ short jelly glasses in the bottom o’ that ol’ hamhouse. I reckoned that meat needed to be up high in the house where all that smoke’d be, so them glasses raised the rack I up off the floor o’ that hamhouse. Turns out them glasses kep’ the meat up out o’ the juice and funk what drip down and collect on the bottom of her, too, which I hadn’t thunk of, but I didn’t let on that when I’s showin’ off to my fambly; it jest look like I’d been knowin’ that all along, an’ a man in my condition don’t need to be givin’ his fambly more ammunition when it come to pokin’ fun at ol’ Dad, y’see..

Tomorrow, the conclusion of the hillbilly ham house hootenanny: smoked meat!

Links I Love {Friday Five}

Friday Five ButtonI apologize for another list post but my mind is stuck on them right now. I have gift lists, guest lists, and grocery lists scattered around the house. When not making or checking off my lists, I read these five great articles this week: 1) It's For You, Teacher Tom is a sweet reflection in the true meaning of gift giving, as observed with preschoolers.

2) If I Do Something Bad, Will You Still Love Me? by Amy Turn Sharp makes me feel all funny inside. She can do that with the shortest stories and I am always amazed.

3) The Chicken In The Snow is Lil's latest blog post. She wrote the comic after we saw a little snowfall and wondered how our chicken Austra must feel.

4) Alex pointed out the Most Popular Photography Tips, Tricks and Hacks post by Lifehacker. I hope to find some time to dig through all the ideas soon.

5) I was thrilled to see my name among the Charcutepalooza Semi-Finalists list. I am so appreciative of those who followed along and supported my meaty writing. If you liked my posts, click through to some of the other sites - I'm among some amazing bloggers!

Did you read anything great this week?

Sweetheart, Sweet Heart {Charcutepalooza}

My final Charcutepalooza post, on the topic of showing off, takes the form of two family stories. family eating charcuterie plate

galloway-balliol crestOrigins of the Sweetheart

Once upon a time in 13th century Europe, lived Devorguilla of Galloway. Devorguilla was a woman of substance (i.e. wealthy land owner) whose parents arranged her marriage to John de Baliol.

Read more of the Baliol family history on Tom Baillieul's website if you wish - it's pretty fascinating stuff!  Tom, Alex's father, also painted and graciously allowed me to use the Devorguilla/John de Baliol crest on the right.

When John died in 1269, Devorguilla embalmed his heart and enshrined in a decorative ivory box to accompany her everywhere. Legend has it that Devorguilla had this heart seated at the opposite head of her dinner table and donated John's portion of the meal to the hungry.

History shows that Devorguilla likely coined the term 'sweetheart' through her dedication to John even after his death. In 1290, she was buried with John's heart at a Cistercian monastery she founded with the name 'Sweetheart Abbey'.

Consumption of the Sweet Heart

703 years after the death of Devorguilla, her descendant Alex Baillieul was born. Alex grew to be an adventurous traveler and cook proud of his Balliol heritage.

Alex's wife Rachel embarked on a year long charcuterie project in 2011, the culmination of which was to be a dish or meal that showed off four styles of meat curing. At the same time as the final Charcutepalooza project assignment, Rachel and Alex intended to attend a CMH Dinner Club with the theme 'show your roots'.

Rachel could think of no 'roots' story better than that of Devorguilla. She knew that she and Alex had to create an edible sweet heart.

examining a beef heartpouring fat over heart meat
Rachel bought a beef heart from Blues Creek Meats. She, Alex, and Lil examined the anatomy, identifying the aorta and chambers while marveling at the mass of the muscle.

Noticing very little fat (or inedible bits), the curing plan became clear: the heart would be cooked slowly in goose and bacon fat. A recipe on From Belly to Bacon confirmed that confit is an appropriate technique for this unusual cut of meat.

When tender, 12 hours after cooking, Alex cooled the heart in the fat. To serve it, he sliced the muscle into thin pieces and seared them in a hot pan. Rachel prepared a rosemary honey drizzle to garnish the sweet heart.

Rachel and Alex ultimately were unable to attend the CMH dinner club. Instead they served sweet heart, fermented Spanish-style chorizo, duck prosciutto, squirrel rilletes, homemade cornichons, and sour cherry preserves on a charcuterie platter for Thanksgiving with extended family, retelling the story of Devorguilla.

Adventurous diners were surprised at the luxurious heart. It was beefy and rich with melt-in-your-mouth texture. Lil declared it "better than hamburger". Devorguilla's namesake, the big hound Devie, heartily approved of the dish, complaining only that she did not get more pieces as treats.

Sweet heart, a dish honoring an ancient relative with the ancient art of charcuterie, was the perfect ending to a year of cured meat.

sweetheart confit beef heart

Final Relfections

I, Rachel, entered the Charcutepalooza challenge with a fair amount of meat curing experience. Any fears of raw meat, botulism, icky meat casings, and expensive investments had already been overcome at the beginning of 2011. Instead, I took on Charcutepalooza as a lens through which to explore food writing and expose more people to the dark secrets of the meat hanging in my basement.

I attempted to record each challenge in a unique way - I told fiction, humor and non-fiction stories, shared new and interpreted recipes, showed off charcuterie in pictures and video, and opined on marriage, meat sourcing, squirrel and vegetarianism. Some of these posts were quite a stretch for my skills and patience but I advanced to spread the love of cured meat.

There is a fabulous trip to France awaiting one of the Charcutepalooza participants. I do not envy Cathy and Kim who must judge the entries. Fortunately, I feel like a winner already because this challenge has strengthened my confidence as a writer and home cook. It even convinced my family that heart is a sweeeeeeet meat.

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Sweet Heart (Beef Heart Confit with Rosemary Honey) Makes: 50+ appetizer servings Time: 12 hours cooking, 48 hours infusion for honey

1/2 cup local lightly-flavored honey 1 stalk fresh rosemary

1 beef heart (4-5 pounds of meat) salt 2-3 quarts of goose, pork, or duck lard (we used a mix of all three)

1. Fold rosemary stalk to fit into the bottom of a half pint jar. 2. Cover rosemary with honey. Put a lid on the jar and set aside at room temperature for 2 or more days, until infusion reaches your desired taste. 3. Salt beef heavily inside and outside of the heart cavity. Chop into large pieces as necessary to fit in an oven-safe pan or pot. 4. Liquefy lard by heating it on the stove top. 5. Pour fat over the heart until all parts of the meat are covered. 6. Place in a 200 degree oven for 12 hours until meat is tender. 7. Cool the heart while submerged in fat. Under refrigeration, the heart keeps indefinitely. 8. For service, remove heart from fat by reheating on the stove top and straining off the fat when it is liquefied. (Fat may be reserved for future use.) 9. Slice the heart into pieces 1/8 inch thick. 10. Heat a cast iron skillet over high heat. Quickly sear heart slices and place on a bed of arugula or other lettuce on a platter. Drizzle with rosemary honey.

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A Six Year Old Makes Lardo & Rat Creature Quiche {Charcutepalooza}

The eleventh Charcutepalooza challenge is curing. Alex and I have cured and dried many meats including saucisson sec, fermented chorizo, and coppa. I asked my daughter Lillian to complete this challenge with me. She's been around hanging meat for most of her life. Curing requires minimal skill and can be left for days at a time, perfect for the distractable mind of a six year old. Watch how Lil cures lardo:

While the lardo cured and dried, our family began reading Columbus-native Jeff Smith's iconic juvenile comic series Bone. One character in the book, an adversarial rat creature, is so mesmerized by quiche that he wants to cook the protagonist Bones into quiche, dreams about quiche, and even argues so adamantly about quiche that the Bones repeatedly escape capture. For the rest of the series, the Bones call the quiche-loving, negligent soldiers 'stupid, stupid rat creatures'.

unbaked lardo bacon quichechild eating lardo quiche
As Lil says in the video, she doesn't like lardo raw but loves it cooked like bacon. We cooked some salted, dried back fat into a quiche that a Lil' rat creature might like - no green stuff or spice. We arranged a few strips of lardo into a star pattern on the center, another recurring theme in Bone.

Alas, our lardo-making daughter did not like the quiche. Alex and I, however, think the the stupid rat creatures were right on: quiche is a great way to enjoy cured meat.

baked lardo quiche

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Stupid Rat Creature Quiche Makes: 6 Time: 20 minutes preparation, 40-50 minutes baking

4 ounces lardo, diced, plus several slices for garnish if desired 5 eggs, beaten 3/4 cup whole milk 1/2 teaspoon salt 10 grinds fresh black pepper 1 cup shredded cheddar single pie crust (my recipe here)

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. 2. Cook lardo in a skillet until lightly browned, drain fat. 3. In a mixing bowl, beat together eggs, milk, salt and pepper. 4. Line a 9-inch quiche or pie pan with crust. Tuck under edges and finish with a fork or fingers. 5. Scatter lardo and cheese on the bottom of the crust. 6. Pour egg mix over the top. 7. Bake in oven for 40-50 minutes or until top is browned. 8. Cut into six slices and serve.

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This post is a part of the year-long Charcutepalooza challenge. Read below for our other meat-curing adventures and reflections.

Modern Mistletoe: Meat, Marriage, & Duck Prosciutto Pizza Waste Not, Want Not Squirrel Rillettes English Pork Pie Photojournal Almost All-Ohio Mouselline How to Make Hot Dogs Like a Girl Mint Lamb Sausage Inspired by Jorgensen Farms Taco Truck Chorizo Sopito Red’s Canadian Bacon or Why I Had to Kill a Pig To Eat Meat Again The Story of the Rachel Salt Cure Old and New Cider Syrup Bacon

Added to Simple Lives Thursday.

Modern Mistletoe: Meat, Marriage, & Duck Prosciutto Pizza {Charcutepalooza}

modern mistle toe: meat and marriage I recently mentioned on twitter that having the first meat of the season hanging in the basement made me feel like our house was a home again. Someone (who are you? I can't find the tweet now!) replied "It's modern mistletoe!"

That got me to thinking about how meat curing is a tasty metaphor for my nearly-eleven-year-long marriage to Alex.

modern marriage: working togetherCuring meat takes time and attention from both parties in our house. We help each other to procure the ingredients, turn the meat in cure, and check it as it dries.

Some couples like to have independent hobbies but we like being in each other's business. Even before I ate meat, I assisted Alex with charcuterie because it's a fascinating hobby.

marriage and laughter

Meat curing and marriage benefit from a healthy dose of humor. Much of making bacon (or duck prosciutto in this case) is icky work - there's raw meat, mildly-toxic salt, and the possibility of insects being attracted to the drying meat. The cure for the gross parts of curing is to laugh. We make jokes (sausage is especially good for word play), gently tease, and sometimes try to drip meat juice on a spouse during a photo shoot. It's all good fun.

duck proscuitto pizza

When meat is done curing, we cook up creative dishes together. In the case of the duck prosciutto, we added it to homemade pizza. Alex made the dough and I popped open a jar of my home-canned tomato sauce. We added a pile of arugula and mozzarella before topping the 'za with thin prosciutto slices and a grate of Parmesan.

Alex and I enjoyed the pizza with a glass of wine and candle on the table in the company of our daughter Lil (who also served as the photographer for the three portraits above). We savored the from-scratch food we made together.

Curing meat challenges us to work together, listen to each other, and enjoy the finer things in life. Meat IS our modern mistletoe, the object under which we find love.

duck prosciutto pizza recipe[print_this]

Duck Prosciutto Pizza Makes: 1 12-inch pizza Time: 2 hours dough, 20 minutes assembly, 7-10 minutes cooking

1/4 recipe homemade pizza dough 1/4 cup tomato sauce 3 ounces fresh arugula 1/2 cup shredded mozzarella cheese 2 ounces duck prosciutto, sliced as thinly as possible 1/4 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese

1. Heat oven to 450 degrees F with a baking stone on center rack. 2. Make a thin circle from the dough and place on a cornmeal dusted pizza peel or back of a cookie sheet. 3. Top pizza with a bit of tomato sauce, then arugula and mozzarella cheese. 4. Arrange duck prosciutto and top with Parmesan. 5. Transfer pizza to the baking stone. 6. Bake for 7-10 minutes until cheese is melted and slightly brown. Remove from oven, let rest 1-2 minutes, cut, and serve.

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This post is a part of the year-long Charcutepalooza challenge. Read below for our other meat-curing adventures and reflections.

Waste Not, Want Not Squirrel Rillettes English Pork Pie Photojournal Almost All-Ohio Mouselline How to Make Hot Dogs Like a Girl Mint Lamb Sausage Inspired by Jorgensen Farms Taco Truck Chorizo Sopito Red’s Canadian Bacon or Why I Had to Kill a Pig To Eat Meat Again The Story of the Rachel Salt Cure Old and New Cider Syrup Bacon

Waste Not, Want Not Squirrel Rillettes {Charcutepalooza}

squirrel rillette charcuterie platterWhen you think of squirrel, what comes to mind? Do you picture a cute fluffy tailed animal, some backyard wildlife? Or  is your vision something more sinister? Are your squirrels tomato thieves, bird feeder destroyers, and dog taunters?

Is anyone thinking savory and delectable? I am.

About Squirrel Meat

While squirrels are ubiquitous in most American neighborhoods, they are almost never on the dinner table. Why? It has nothing to do with the outstanding dark meat, smooth textured, rich taste.

Squirrels are tiny animals when skinned, about 3/4 of a pound including bones. Though 'tree rats' are more numerous than HRC stickers in my liberal neighborhood, harvesting and processing enough to feed a crowd would be arduous.

Speaking of the bones, they are numerous. Wine braised squirrel is every bit as tasty as duck (I swear) but eating around the needle thin skeleton is a royal pain.

Then there's the concern about safety. Could something that runs around alleys, tree lines, and lawns be good to eat? I myself wouldn't touch the first few squirrel Alex made.

After a whole summer witnessing the beasts steal my garden produce and hang off bird feeders, it hit me: squirrels eat very well. They are not rats eating trash at all - they scavenge abundant wild nuts, seeds, and veggies. Most of what they eat is as untouched from chemicals as the pasture ranged meats I pay so much for at local markets.

Stretching

The October Charcutepalooza challenge was to make an appetizer of rillette, confit, gallentine or roulade, to stretch a single cut of meat into a dish that would feed many. I extended the stretching theme to include my food budget. What delicious small bite could I create without purchasing ingredients?

I immediately thought of squirrel because 1) we had one in the freezer and 2) making it into confit and then rillette would be the perfect way to enjoy the meat without the annoyance of the bones.

squirrelseasoned squirrelgoose lard for rillettesquirrel rillette cooking

Alex flavored a backyard harvested squirrel overnight with garden herbs and garlic. Next, I put the squirrel in goose lard from last year's Xmas Eve roast with a few end bits of pork belly leftover from making bacon for a long warm bath. Alex picked the meat, pulsed it quickly in a food processor, and packed it into containers. He capped the rillette with excess goose fat.

To serve the rillette,  I continued with the waste not, want not theme. I made homemade crackers with the amount of sourdough starter I would have discarded when feeding the fermented goodstuff this morning. Home grown, home canned cornichons and homemade cranberry sauce completed the platter.

squirrel rillette on cracker with cranberry

Would you try a bite?

Pork Pie Photo Journal {Charcutepalooza}

Click any picture to view full size.

1. Butter, homemade lamb lard, and flour. 2. Fats cut into flour. 3. Chopping homegrown onions. 4. Mixing egg and water for pastry. 5. Pastry dough on plastic, ready to chill. 6. Pastry dough chilling in fridge. 7. Grinder cooling in freezer. 8. Onions sweating in olive oil. 9. Chopping pork butt. 10. Lil picking fresh thyme. 11. Herb, salt, and pepper mix. 12. Bowls ready to grind. 13. Meat grinding. 14. Tattoo and ground meat. 15. Adding onions. 16. Aromatics and onions. 17. Binding. 18. Adding homemade chicken stock to bind. 19. Sausage complete. 20. Rolling set up. 21. Cutting dough. 22. Rolling pastry. 23. Getting ready to place meat. 24. Shaping meat on dough. 25. Meat on pastry. 26. Pastry trimmed. 27. Edges folded up. 28. Top on. 29. Egg washing. 30. Dirty dishes. 31. Cutting crackers from scrap. 32. Dog bone scrap crackers. 33. In oven after 10 minutes. 34. In oven after 30 minutes. 35. Temping. 36. Cooling behind pot barricade. 37. Transferring to plate. 38. Hound shaped top. 39. Hound sniffing. 40. Cooling in fridge. 41. Evening snack with pub ale. 42. Reluctant child. 43. Breakfast slicing. 44. Flaky crust. An epic 7 animal products from 4 species, 3 cooks, 6 hours.

 

This photo journal is our entry in the September Charcutepalooza challenge: packing. We used the recipe from Michael Ruhlman's book Charcuterie, substituting a small portion of home cured bacon for the ham and omitting aspic. We found the flavor and method to be spot on but the dough recipe made at least 30% more than necessary.

 

Additional Charcutepalooza posts:

Almost All-Ohio Mouselline

How to Make Hot Dogs Like a Girl

Mint Lamb Sausage Inspired by Jorgensen Farms

Taco Truck Chorizo Sopito

Red's Canadian Bacon or Why I Had to Kill a Pig To Eat Meat Again

The Story of the Rachel

Salt Cure Old and New

Cider Syrup Bacon