MAKING CORNED MOOSE, CARIBOU OR BEAR

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Making Corned Moose, Caribou or Bear image

I did not find one here so I posted this one. From A Kitchen Bible, says can use it for Bear also. Author Marg Stav

Provided by Cheri B

Categories     Bear

Time P1m

Yield 100 lbs, 100 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 6

100 lbs meat
1 gallon warm water
8 lbs salt
4 lbs sugar
2 ounces baking soda
2 ounces saltpeter

Steps:

  • Salt down meat in layers in a wooden keg, alternating meat and salt.
  • At this same time make a solution of sugar, soda, and salt peter in a gallon of WARM water (it needs to dissolve all the sugar and etc.). Let both stand overnight.
  • Next day pour, the solution over the meat, keeping it covered by a large inverted plate.
  • After a few days, drain the solution, bring to boil, straining off the blood.
  • Replace the (cooled) solution on the meat, cover with a large inverted plate on the top of the meat.
  • This preparation is ready to use as corned meat within 4-6 weeks.
  • But it is satisfactory at intermediate stages. If it is to salty it can be soaked or parboiled. Save the salty water for soup or stews, for cooking potatoes, veggies, and for making gravies. (she says, use your own judgment).
  • (Prep time on this is your own, how fast can you cut up 100 lbs of meat? ).
  • From the book Putting Food By Authors Greene, Hertzberg and Vaughan.
  • Saltpeter also called potassium nitrate or sodium nitrate. Most simply nitrates are changed into nitrites by metabolism when we eat them, or by the action with the protein of raw meat being cured.
  • If you buy the substance at a drugstore you are likely to get the compound with potassium,and note that it is labeled as a diuretic. If you buy it at a farm supply store, it will probably be sodium nitrate. Many store bought curing mixtures already made up-some even containing spices and simulated hickory smoke flavorings- contain both nitrate and soduim nitrite.
  • Saltpeter has been used for centuries as a means of intensifing and.
  • holding the red color considered so appetizing in ham and allied pork products, and in corned beef, etc. Nitrites also help to prevent the growth of Celsius Botulinum.
  • Storing Cured Meat:.
  • The heavy concentration of salt protects Corned Beef and salted pork for several months in the brine which they're held is kept below 38 Deg F/3°C.
  • Freezing storage of sausage and cured meat is relatively limited: after more than 2 to 4 months at Zero F / -18C, the salt in the fat causes it to become rancid.
  • This is why country-dwellers wait for winter weather to slaughter hogs and beef for there own table.Once in cure, meat should be held 36-38 F/2-3 C: for the largest pieces this means a thermometer inserted to the center of the meatiest part.
  • Below 36F/2C: salt penetrates the tissue too slowly. If the temp of the storage drops below freezing and stays there for several days, increase the days of salting time by the number of freezing days.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 70.2, Sodium 14234, Carbohydrate 18.1, Sugar 18.1

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