• 9/7 Nat'l Salami Day - 1

    From Dave Drum@1:229/452 to All on Mon Sep 6 19:22:12 2021
    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Salami
    Categories: Sausages, Preserving
    Yield: 5 Pounds

    5 lb Ground beef
    +=OR=+
    3 lb Ground beef
    +=AND=+
    2 lb Ground pork
    5 ts Morton tender quick curing
    - salt
    2 1/2 ts Mustard seed
    3 ts Ground pepper; coarse
    +=OR=+
    2 ts Crushed red pepper flakes
    2 ts Liquid hickory smoke
    3 ts Garlic salt

    Mix well with hands and refrigerate for 24 hours. Mix again
    and refrigerate for another 24 hours.

    On the third day, mix and shape into rolls approximately 3"
    in diameter.

    Bake on lowest oven shelf at 225ºF for 8 hours, turning
    every 2 hours.

    From: http://www.recipesource.com

    Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives

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  • From JIM WELLER@1:135/392 to DAVE DRUM on Mon Sep 6 22:26:00 2021

    Quoting Dave Drum to All <=-

    Title: Salami

    Bake on lowest oven shelf at 225ºF for 8 hours, turning
    every 2 hours.

    The best tasting salami is cured, fermented, air dried for up to
    three weeks and sometimes cold smoked, but not cooked. The curing
    and drying processes can be speeded up by holding the sausage at 40
    C but that level of heat won't cook the meat.





    Cheers

    Jim


    ... The 4 Italian food groups: cheese, wine, olives and sausage.

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  • From Dave Drum@1:3634/12 to JIM WELLER on Wed Sep 8 05:12:00 2021
    JIM WELLER wrote to DAVE DRUM <=-

    Title: Salami

    Bake on lowest oven shelf at 225§F for 8 hours, turning
    every 2 hours.

    The best tasting salami is cured, fermented, air dried for up to
    three weeks and sometimes cold smoked, but not cooked. The curing
    and drying processes can be speeded up by holding the sausage at 40
    C but that level of heat won't cook the meat.

    That's what I call "hard salami". It is much preferred here.

    Another use for diced salami:

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Donald Link's Braised Chicken w/Salami & Olives
    Categories: Poultry, Vegetables, Beef, Chilies, Wine
    Yield: 5 Servings

    4 lb Chicken legs and/or thighs
    2 ts Kosher salt
    3/4 ts Black pepper
    3 tb Olive oil
    1 md Onion; thin sliced
    5 cl Garlic; thin sliced
    1/2 Fennel bulb; thin sliced
    1 (8") rosemary branch
    1 1/4 c Diced salami
    1 c Pitted green olives; rinsed,
    - halved, not too salty
    1 ts Dried oregano
    1/2 ts Red pepper flakes
    1/2 c Dry white wine
    2 tb Tomato paste
    2 tb All-purpose flour
    2 1/4 c Chicken broth
    4 Dried bay leaves
    Juice of 1 lemon

    Set the oven @ 375ºF/190ºC.

    Season the chicken all over with salt and pepper. Heat
    the olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat and
    sear the chicken in 2 batches until golden brown, about
    7 minutes per side. Transfer the cooked chicken to a 9"
    X 13" baking dish or another large, shallow casserole.

    Add the onions to the skillet and cook in the rendered
    chicken fat until brown, stirring, about 4 minutes. Add
    the garlic, fennel, rosemary branch, salami, olives,
    oregano, and red pepper flakes. Pour in the wine and
    simmer to reduce, scraping the bottom of the pan. Stir
    in the tomato paste and cook for 5 minutes, until
    caramelized. Add flour and cook, stirring to
    incorporate, for another 2 minutes.

    Pour in the chicken broth in batches and stir to
    incorporate. Bring to a simmer over medium heat and cook
    until slightly thickened, 2 to 3 minutes. Stir in the
    bay leaves and lemon juice.

    Pour the sauce over the chicken in the baking dish and
    roast in the oven, basting every 30 minutes, until the
    chicken is very tender and the sauce is reduced but
    isn't drying out, 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Discard the bay
    leaves and rosemary.

    Serve chicken warm, with plenty of sauce.

    RECIPE FROM: https://food52.com

    Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives

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