Bresaola & Coppa
Bresaola & Coppa
Have just placed a couple of items in the chamber
Bresaola on the left and Coppa on the right.
Bresaola is done with the Charcuterie recipe.
Coppa is a mix of what Jason Molinari does and Charcuterie.
It's a whole muscle in a Beef Bung. This was cured using the spicy mix from Charcuterie. Rinsed before putting into the bung and then tied as you can see. I thought about netting it but wanted the more traditional look.
I'm not sure if i should have rinsed it before placing into the bung but time will tell in the flavour i suppose.
Temp is set at 15C and humidity is averaging 70%.
I'll let you know how it goes.
Cheers
Steve
Bresaola on the left and Coppa on the right.
Bresaola is done with the Charcuterie recipe.
Coppa is a mix of what Jason Molinari does and Charcuterie.
It's a whole muscle in a Beef Bung. This was cured using the spicy mix from Charcuterie. Rinsed before putting into the bung and then tied as you can see. I thought about netting it but wanted the more traditional look.
I'm not sure if i should have rinsed it before placing into the bung but time will tell in the flavour i suppose.
Temp is set at 15C and humidity is averaging 70%.
I'll let you know how it goes.
Cheers
Steve
Steve - you did right with the beef bung for the coppa. I have made it several times with and without casing. Protein lined casings don't conform well enough to the meat, in my experience. Beef bungs work great. The coppa I've made in just netting - no casing - dried out too quickly. Edible, but too hard on the outer ring before it's done properly in the middle.
Haven't tried bressaola yet, but your photo encourages me!
Jeff
Haven't tried bressaola yet, but your photo encourages me!
Jeff
Hi Steve - here is a picture of a finished coppa in a beef bung, and next to it a finished coppa in just netting. You can see that the netted one is a bit dry around the edges. It was still good tasting, but I've found that as you age these their flavor improves markedly. If they are just in a net, it's hard to age them very long without hardening them up. I'll send an update when I break into the one on the left.
Also discovered another thing everybody already knows - you've gotta slice these paper thin to get the full benefit. Somehow that makes a huge difference.
Cheers,
Jeff
Also discovered another thing everybody already knows - you've gotta slice these paper thin to get the full benefit. Somehow that makes a huge difference.
Cheers,
Jeff