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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
As DIY'ers our daughter and SIL buy slab bacon and slice it with an old slicer i used for many years slicing deer jerky. It was absent the carriage when i acquired it but our DIY'er SIL made a wooden carriage that works well. This is a new development for them and i haven't gotten a chance to taste the bacon but daughter reports it's the most lean bacon since dad raised and butchered hogs.
 

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Discussion Starter · #3 ·
The daughter's is the first place i'm inviting myself to just as soon as this 24 hour stay at home curfew is lifted.:biggrin2:For time being i can only imagine what it would taste like grilled on SIL's grill or how ever they want to cook it or on my old charcoal grill.
 

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I'm surprised that little guy could do bacon; maybe the older ones had larger motors. Mine would not do it.
 

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I remember my dad buying slab bacon (and this goes way back as I am 77). He sliced it with a sharp butchers knife. Cut it thick the way he liked it. He only sliced as much as he was going to cook. The rest of the slab stayed fresher that way.
 

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Discussion Starter · #9 ·
I remember my dad buying slab bacon (and this goes way back as I am 77). He sliced it with a sharp butchers knife. Cut it thick the way he liked it. He only sliced as much as he was going to cook. The rest of the slab stayed fresher that way.
And that's how the 3rd generation of sharpening butcher knives shaped this poor old whet stone. Coarse side has worn through to the fine side in the center. It still works just fine today but ya just gotta know how to make it cooperate.
 

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Yeah, I have sliced slab bacon by hand. Thicker for breakfast, cooked in the oven. And of course I have leftovers.

So that I can make BLT's !! Especially when the farmers market has REAL tomatoes, or I can get some from neighbors.

Nothing better on a summer's day than a BLT, with nich juicy tomatoes, warm bacon, head lettuce and some mayo on freshly toasted bread. The tomatoes have been sliced thick and lightly salted to bring out the winey snap of flavour. The bacon is still a bit chewy, not crispy enough to stab a man's heart. And the lettuce is iceberg, cold enough and crisp enough so that it seems like it did come from it's namesake.

And then that first bite. The rough texture of the bread, the acid burst of the tomato with the bight spike of flavor from the sea salt. The warm chewy cripiness of that smoky piece of pork goodness sliced just right and the clean and and chilled taste of the iceberg lettuce all rounded out by that smooth and slightly sweet taste of mayo.

tastes so good you want another!!
 

· A "Handy Husband"
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Yeah, I have sliced slab bacon by hand. Thicker for breakfast, cooked in the oven. And of course I have leftovers.

So that I can make BLT's !! Especially when the farmers market has REAL tomatoes, or I can get some from neighbors.

Nothing better on a summer's day than a BLT, with nich juicy tomatoes, warm bacon, head lettuce and some mayo on freshly toasted bread. The tomatoes have been sliced thick and lightly salted to bring out the winey snap of flavour. The bacon is still a bit chewy, not crispy enough to stab a man's heart. And the lettuce is iceberg, cold enough and crisp enough so that it seems like it did come from it's namesake.

And then that first bite. The rough texture of the bread, the acid burst of the tomato with the bight spike of flavor from the sea salt. The warm chewy cripiness of that smoky piece of pork goodness sliced just right and the clean and and chilled taste of the iceberg lettuce all rounded out by that smooth and slightly sweet taste of mayo.

tastes so good you want another!!
Do you write for a food magazine? If not you should apply.

Sent from my RCT6A03W13E using Tapatalk
 

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Arrrgggh. I've followed this thread and can't stand it anymore. This stay at home stuff needs to get over with.:crying:

I know where I can be pork belly most any day without ordering it, but I won't go to that store right now, and I've got books and the internet chock full of bacon curing recipes. It isn't difficult and you get a flavor you want instead of what someone else wants to make.
 

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And then that first bite. The rough texture of the bread, the acid burst of the tomato with the bight spike of flavor from the sea salt. The warm chewy cripiness of that smoky piece of pork goodness sliced just right and the clean and and chilled taste of the iceberg lettuce all rounded out by that smooth and slightly sweet taste of mayo.

tastes so good you want another!!



That is a darned cruel thing to do to people when real mater season is at least 60 days away. :wink2::wink2:
 

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Discussion Starter · #18 ·
Arrrgggh. I've followed this thread and can't stand it anymore. This stay at home stuff needs to get over with.:crying:

I know where I can be pork belly most any day without ordering it, but I won't go to that store right now, and I've got books and the internet chock full of bacon curing recipes. It isn't difficult and you get a flavor you want instead of what someone else wants to make.
Keep occupied doing something. Sharpening that butcher knife comes to mind. I'm betten you can have it sharp enough to shave with by the time you can by a slab of bacon, and don't forget to slice it thick because it only takes half as many cuts.:vs_laugh:
I would be surprised if your books don't mention Morton Sugar Cure and Morton Tender Quick.
 

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I would be surprised if your books don't mention Morton Sugar Cure and Morton Tender Quick.
Yes some do. Others call for pink salt #1 or Prague powder. Both are curing salts not pink Himalayan salt. I have Tender Quick, use it on pork and chicken. Chicken is "different" cured with it.
 
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Do you write for a food magazine? If not you should apply.

Sent from my RCT6A03W13E using Tapatalk
No, but I used to be a technical writer in IT. Writing business requirements, how to manuals, operation manuals and the like.

And I have written some short stories.

But no, I have never written for a food magazine. That is quite a compliment.

Thank you very much!!

That was the first time in a long while that the words have been been able to flow like that.
 
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