needed a good activity to walk away from compute (evil) for a bit, made world's ugliest brownie
also diabetes as a nice bonus !
also diabetes as a nice bonus !
omg i made banana bread too last week for the people at work, they liked it
next time i will make cookies just to do something new
next time i will make cookies just to do something new
last summer i was able to get ahold of a propane range with a small oven thanks to a kind neighbor, and since getting it cleaned and working i've been making a lot of bread and cooled roasts as i've found it to be the cheapest way to have good meals the whole week long, i'm also a very big fan of cold cuts. however, i've noticed an interesting phenomenon over the last few weeks and was curious if there was a name for it
generally over the winter months i have a fire in my cabin once a day or less to keep it above freezing, as i'm usually out doing things all day since there's much less sunlight hours. i usually keep my roasts on the opposite side of the cabin away from the wood stove in a spot that i would imagine is usually about 35-40°f, the average temperature of most refrigerators. because i was exceptionally busy over the last two weeks i had the last portion of a roast sitting in that condition untouched for close to a week and a half. i expected it to be spoiled when i returned but instead i noticed something much different
because of how a refrigerator works, and the limited size, there tends to be a lot of moisture which in turn causes foods to spoil as bacteria grows from the moisture wicked on the food from the refrigerator; however, the open air in the wintertime is very dry, and exceptionally so in my cabin as the wood stove further dries the air when it runs. as a result the roast did not spoil, but rather cured in such a way that it resembles a sort of prosciutto, with a rind on the outside spices much like other cured meats and a very potent, delicious flavor in the center as much of the moisture has evaporated from the roast
is there a term for this kind of curing? at first i thought it might be dry curing, but i didn't salt the roast as you would for curing which i greatly prefer as it retains a lot of its original porketta spicing without being too salty. whatever it is i need to do more experiments with it because it's fantastic
generally over the winter months i have a fire in my cabin once a day or less to keep it above freezing, as i'm usually out doing things all day since there's much less sunlight hours. i usually keep my roasts on the opposite side of the cabin away from the wood stove in a spot that i would imagine is usually about 35-40°f, the average temperature of most refrigerators. because i was exceptionally busy over the last two weeks i had the last portion of a roast sitting in that condition untouched for close to a week and a half. i expected it to be spoiled when i returned but instead i noticed something much different
because of how a refrigerator works, and the limited size, there tends to be a lot of moisture which in turn causes foods to spoil as bacteria grows from the moisture wicked on the food from the refrigerator; however, the open air in the wintertime is very dry, and exceptionally so in my cabin as the wood stove further dries the air when it runs. as a result the roast did not spoil, but rather cured in such a way that it resembles a sort of prosciutto, with a rind on the outside spices much like other cured meats and a very potent, delicious flavor in the center as much of the moisture has evaporated from the roast
is there a term for this kind of curing? at first i thought it might be dry curing, but i didn't salt the roast as you would for curing which i greatly prefer as it retains a lot of its original porketta spicing without being too salty. whatever it is i need to do more experiments with it because it's fantastic