Biltong

I was at a friend's birthday party a few weeks ago and was seated next to someone I'd never met, and, inevitably, The Meat Club came up.  Turns out my new friend was South African and enamored with a South African dried meat called Biltong.  I was clueless, but it sounded great to me and a good way to use some of my leaner cuts of beef.  But, not having a good desert wind to dry it in, my plans were tabled.  Fortunately, fate intervened in the form of my wife's birthday, when she asked me to get her a dehydrator (which I quickly did before she decided to change her mind and ask for a pair of shoes).

So, the stars aligned, and I pulled out some of my lower grade beef from the freezer to give it a test drive.  I found a couple of sites on-line (http://www.3men.com/biltong.htm; http://www.markblumberg.com/biltong.html; there are tons of others), and then started cutting, mixing, mashing, and drying.  I used some generic "swiss steaks" and "cube steaks" from our last cow the Bud's processed, since I generally don't like to use these for other cooking and they looked pretty lean.  I cut them into 1-2" strips and then dried at 140 degrees F for 12 hours. 

Turned out pretty good, especially for a first effort and the quality of the meat I used.  Next time I'll carve up a piece of the round into thicker strips and probably turn down the heat a bit and go a little longer.  The dehydrator manual recommends 140-160F for jerky, but my sense from reading about biltong is that it's not supposed to be quite as dry/tough as typical American jerky.

If anyone has any insights or experience, feel free to chime in.

(download)

Snack Sticks

So I have been on the Snack Stick (aka Slim Jim) kick for a while and not had that great results.  So far I have tried three different recipes and they all taste like dried out hamburger. 

I used

http://lpoli.50webs.com/index_files/Snack%20Sticks.pdf

some random one online, and

http://events.nytimes.com/recipes/1884/2001/12/30/The-Original-Slim-Jim/recipe.html

This one, http://www.michigan-sportsman.com/forum/showthread.php?t=249097 looks the best, and from dudes who know what they are doing, but I don't want to use a store bought mix, but their methods look spot on.

I have not kept the type of meat constant, but I have kept the fat to meat ratio pretty even.

The first and second time I cleaned out the freezer and used lamb, veal, boar and duck, the second time I used only duck and boar. 
I have tried three different cooking methods.  I would use a smoker but I don't have a vertical smoker

First time, dehydrator, 36 hours, crumbly texture

Second time, oven (170 degrees for 6 hours), good sausage texture, but more like a sausage and less like a snack stick

Third time, (this recipe I used cure #1 and LHP starter culture and let cure at 90 degrees and 90% humidity for 24 hours then used the dehydrator for 12 hours, came out crumbly and nasty.

The smoker may be the only way to go, and I won't know until I get, or borrow a smoker from someone.
Every good stack stick I have had has been done in a smoker.

Has anyone done this before.

Also my prosciutto has been drying for 14 months now, should I bust it out or keep it there?

I also have a couple rabbits left if anyone wants one, or several for Xmas dinner, buy or trade

(download)