8kg lean beef or venison
Grand, thank you!8kg lean beef or venison
2kg beef fat
180g salt
60g ground coriander seeds
20g black pepper
10g ground cloves
20g ground nutmeg
about 150ml Worcester sauce
Mix together then mince. Mix thoroughly then stuff into chipolata sized casing and hang to dry for 1-2 weeks.
Thanks, I sometimes get it right and other times not. It's actually a boerewors (cumberland sausage equivalent??) recipe but just without the added water. Apparently sheep fat works better for the dried stuff but beef fat does the trick for me.Having sampled @takbok product, I can absolutely and categorically say he has the recipe spot on.
Looks just the ticket Ws.Turned out beautifully, I'm pleased to report. The biltong box was working great, but I was needing to get an emergency batch in, so finished off the droewors in the dehydrator. Just perfect for our tastes now, as we prefer it slightly wet. Definitely a recipe to keep. Thanks fellas
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Thanks Ade. I'm pretty sure I should have left it until it was really dry, but I like the texture so much I took a chance. I actually added Cure2 as well, just to be on the safe side. Texture and flavour is exactly to my tastes, but the downside is as it's still a touch moist it'll bloom a white mould soon as look at you. Harmless enough though, and easily avoided by vacuum packing early on (hence the Cure2! If I vac-packed it as it is with no Cure I'd be running the risk of botulism) I don't see it lasting long enough to spoil thoughLooks just the ticket Ws.
Nice one.
This will work well . Worcester sauce is a solid ingredient and is also lekker for any biltong mix.Nitrates are probably not warranted for such a short cure time, so cure 1 which is nitrite based is more suited. To be honest, I've been making it and biltong for 30 years, and never used any cureing salts.
this is the recipe I use. Substitute venison for beef, but you do need 15-20% fat. Lamb fat works well.
10lb Beef mince - but not too lean
5 tsp. salt
1 level tsp. pepper
1/2 tsp. allspice
1/2 tsp. cloves
5 tablespoon rough ground coriander.
75ml white wine vinegar. Don't use malt vinegar.
50ml Worcester sauce
Sheep casing or a butcher who is willing to fill them
for you. The butcher will know them as chippolata
casings. These casings are much thinner than normal
casings.
Mix the dry ingredients.
Combine the wet ingredients.
Put the mince in a big plastic bowl. Sprinkle
about 1/4 of the dry mixture and mix it thoroughly with
your hands. Repeat the process with the wet mixture.
Repeat the process until all the mix is gone.
Stuff sausage casings. Don't stuff the casings to full
else it takes too long to dry and don't stuff them too
loosely else it tastes yucky with all the dry skin.
Don't forget that you will lose about half of the total
weight to moisture loss. If you are getting a butcher to
stuff the casing tell him to stuff it about 75% of the
amount that he stuffs chippolata's.
Hang in box
Wait a few days
The vinegar breaks down the fat and the worcester sauce
neutralises the vinegar taste.
You're possibly quite right, but as I've vacuum-packed a load I didn't want to take any chancesNitrates are probably not warranted for such a short cure time, so cure 1 which is nitrite based is more suited