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You are here: Home / Archives for Jason

Pasteurize Milk via Sous Vide

March 8, 2019 by Jason 7 Comments

All you need to pasteurize milk at home is a stove, stainless steel pot, and a thermometer. You slowly warm the milk to 145F and hold the temperature there for 30 minutes. Once done, you’ll quickly cool the milk down to 40F (by putting the pot in a sink with ice water) and then store in the refrigerator.

Using a stovetop however, comes with a few things you’ll need to watch.

First, when warming your milk, you’ll want to stir it often to keep the heat dispersed throughout. If you let it sit too long without stirring, it can scorch (or scald). It can also scorch if you heat it too quickly. If you have a double-boiler, this is even better then a single pot and decreases the likelihood of scorching.

I put a dedicated thermo probe in the milk so that I know its temperature at all times. Once you’ve reached your target temp of 145F, you’ll need to watch the heat and keep stirring to keep the temperature up. This may entail increasing or decreasing the heat of your stove to keep the milk above 145F for the full 30 minutes.

Finally, when cooling, you’ll also want to stir in order to cool it down quickly. The longer it takes to cool, the better the opportunity for spoilage or bacterial contamination.

Enter sous vide

I decided to try pasteurization using my Anova immersion circulator. Since I use it regularly to make cheese, it made sense to try pasteurization with it as it almost eliminates the possibility of scorching. The longest part was getting the water bath up to 148F (I set the circulator to get the water bath about 3-4 degrees hotter than my target temperature of the milk). The next time I do it, I’ll get the circulator going ahead of time to get my water heading towards 148F. While scorching is not nearly as likely, stirring is still recommended just to disperse the heat evenly to get the milk up to the needed 145F. I still keep a dedicated thermo probe in the milk so that I know it’s at the proper temperature. Once the milk hit 145-146F, I was able to walk away from it and it maintained the steady temperature the entire time. The process was easy and I think I’ll move to use my sous vide circulator for my future pasteurization needs.

If you’re really a techie, here’s the Anova Culinary Sous Vide Precision Cooker w WI-FI and Bluetooth, the same as mine, but the wifi allows you to control the unit remotely.

Your comments are always welcomed!

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Filed Under: cheesemaking, food/culinary, how-to Tagged With: cheesemaking, food/culinary, how-to

Make Esrom Cheese

March 6, 2019 by Jason 2 Comments

Here’s my first attempt at Esrom cheese. It’s a trappist-style cheese that should turn out creamy/semisoft… but not as far as brie or camembert. Named after an abbey of monks around the 12th century, it’s a washed rind cheese. What’s interesting is that we often don’t press a softer cheese, but rather let it sink into the mould. This one, however, gets pressed with increasing weight all the way up to 75 lbs. These are usually hard cheese weights. How we prepare the curd and stifle the acid development, we retain a lot of moisture. Even after pressing, the wheel is pretty pliable and needs to be handled delicately. It’s brined after pressing and before air-drying for a few days. The next regimen will take special attention to caring for the rind. It needs to be flipped twice a day and I’ll do the first wash when I see the geo tric kicking in. I’m bound to have unwanted molds start and that’s where it’ll take repeated washes to get that off and let the white and red molds kick in. See more info on pics.

If you want to try to make this cheese, here is a link to the recipe I used from Jim Wallace at Cheesemaking.com.

For cheesemaking, I now use the Anova immersion circulator and I don’t know what I’d do without it. You can really control the temperature, including holding the same temperature for as long as you need, and also manage the ramping of temperatures needed in most cheesemaking. If you’re really a techie, here’s the Anova Culinary Sous Vide Precision Cooker w WI-FI and Bluetooth, the same unit, but has Wifi.

Sanitization is critical. I boil my cheesecloth, moulds, and bamboo mats in scalding water to have ready for pressing.
The curd is cut to about 3/8″ size and is pretty soft. We’ll cook it to firm it up a bit. When squeezed, it should willingly consolidate, but then kind of fall apart.
This is a washed curd cheese too. I removed a third of the whey and replaced with the same amount of 120F water. This slows the acid development and also starts cooking the curd.
The curd is pressed by hand into the mould to help consolidation.
Close-up of the curd.
First press is only 8 pounds for 15 minutes.
After pressing with 8 pounds the first 15 minutes, it was 30 minutes at 25 lbs., 60 minutes at 50 lbs., and 5 hours at 75 lbs. I went longer than 5 hours though as I thought the curd was still a little too wet. So, I left in the press for maybe another 5 hours.
A nice consolidated curd before brining.
In the brine. I did 7 hours on one side, and 7-8 on the other after flipping in between. This is also kept at 55F.
After brine… now drying.

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Filed Under: cheesemaking, food/culinary, how-to Tagged With: cheesemaking, food/culinary, how-to

Venison Shank and Barley Stew

March 1, 2019 by Jason Leave a Comment

Venison shank and barley stew is a wintertime essential. I took the shanks off the bone for this one because I used my own chicken stock and wanted to make it ready-to-eat at camp this weekend. These were braised all day at 200f.

My own recipe and process… always start with a cast iron dutch oven. Saute diced onions and minced garlic in hot oil (with cumin, and some garam masala). Once spices are bloomed, add your fresh cut carrots, salt and cook some more.

Add chicken fat and stock just enough to lube up while you scrape the brown bits up. Lay in the shanks… sprinkle with parsley and rosemary. Roll shanks around a little and finally top up with stock until they are covered. Toss in 4 bay leaves. Celery would have been great, but I was out!

Braise for as long as you have (all day at 200, or turn up to 225 if you want faster). At the point several hours in where you can take out a shank and shred it with a fork, shred all.

The collagen and tendons will pull right apart and the thickest ones turn to a goo that as cooked starts working as a thickener. I then add in quick cook barley. Love this stuff. Then two tablespoons of horseradish. I also dumped in some leftover peas (because they were there) a can of tomato paste and actually, some fresh cilantro this time. I was easy on it because I plan to cut fresh and garnish with it too.

Stir, taste, cook some more if you want. Serve on some crunchy rye or sourdough. This is a stick-to-your-ribs dish from those shanks!!

Deboned shanks… but, you don’t have to!
Once you can pull out a shank and shred with fork, do it, then add back in.
Shred shanks with a fork.
Add in vegetables and quick cook barley.

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Filed Under: food/culinary, homesteading, recipe Tagged With: food/culinary, homesteading, recipe

Quest for the best Goetta

December 29, 2018 by Jason 13 Comments

This has been an ongoing post over the last 4 years that I have been updating as I tweaked my process and ingredients to make goetta. Not just goetta, but goetta that meets two simple criteria. 1. It tastes like what I remember as a kid, and 2. It cooks up well in the skillet. When I say “cooks well,” I mean, it crisps up on the outside, and doesn’t stick to the skillet so much that it falls apart. This has been the challenge for me. If you’ve read through this post before, try it once more. I’ve taken out the extraneous info and anything leading up to my previous attempts that I deemed unsuccessful.

Yes, you can find the recipe and my detailed process below. I’m not stingy. In fact, it’s my hope you will try it, and report back on your results, and thoughts. The recipe is not where good goetta is at since it’s subjective and everyone has different tastes. It’s the process we employ to make goetta that determines its success or failure. Read on to learn more.

It took growing up to realize that growing up in Cincinnati was cool. As a boy, I didn’t know or appreciate its history or wonder. As an adult now interested in heritage and tradition, I’ve learned so much about the Midwest, my ancestors, and their lifestyles during a certain place and time. It’s still cool to live here… but only now, I live 30 minutes west of Cincinnati. There’s a saying around Cincinnati’s west side…. ‘West-siders always move west’, and that’s true.

First, a little background…

Cincinnati and Goetta

Goetta loaded in ceramic mini loave pans, and put in freezer

In a quest to make the best homemade goetta, one can begin, and also end in Cincinnati. The original Porkopolis! While some argue, that “Porkopolis” was not a compliment to Cincinnati,  I say it’s all a matter of perspective. If you didn’t know, Cincinnati was the original hog butcher to the world until around 1860, after which Chicago exceeded Cincinnati in the number of hogs being killed each year. That along with the fact that the majority of Cincinnati’s population was of German descent looking to make sausage go a little further for their families, it’s safe to call goetta a rightful by-product of Porkopolis. “Like Pennsylvanian scrapple or North Carolinian livermush, goetta takes scraps of meat that would otherwise get thrown away—pork, sometimes beef, or offal—and combines them with grains. The resulting mixture is then spiced, smushed into a loaf, sliced, and pan-fried to crispiness.”

For better or for worse… we ate goetta… and a lot of it. Goetta is as familiar as a dollar bill to me and anyone in the surrounding areas… But, drive more than 100 miles in any direction out of Cincinnati, walk into the next Waffle House and order goetta, and they’ll look at you like you had two heads.

Respect to the spice mix, but the magic is in the process

Ground pork, pig skin, chicken hearts (diced chicken liver was added after grind).

You can find many goetta recipes around the internet, with many clever variations, but there’s not a lot of talk about the creation process. I have a goal to make the goetta I remember eating in the 70’s-80’s. It was mostly Glier’s… made just across the river in Covington, Kentucky. There were others too… but this is the one my parents bought, and so you might say I was indoctrinated. “Glier’s has the distinction of containing offal… pork hearts and pork skin, which appear as headcheese-like dark pink chunks in the otherwise pale gray raw patties and give Glier’s a noticeable funky smell before it’s fried. That funk, as pork enthusiasts are well aware, translates into wonderful depth of flavor.”

For this latest round, I didn’t have pork hearts, but I did have chicken hearts from my last harvest, so I used these this time. I also had some chicken livers. I hand-diced the livers in pea-sized pieces.

How it cooks, matters!

A past batch lubed up the skillet nicely, but the consistency was too mushy.

I cook my goetta in a cast iron skillet on medium heat and have a special splash screen I use to catch the many exploding oats. Goetta should cook up right, browning but not sticking or burning before it does. I shouldn’t have to oil or lube up the skillet either. Truly crispy on the outside, and soft on the inside. When the oats snap and pop while cooking, I think it’s close… because they were not overcooked during the initial cooking stage. These things matter when you are trying to recreate nostalgia. I’ve spoken to many people who have made goetta and the common suggestion is water reduction. After the goetta making process, the mixture is very thick, and bits do need to be scraped off the pan (or crockpot) periodically. The final mixture should be so thick that if you take a spoonful, and drop it back in the mixture, it sits on top, and doesn’t sink back in.

The recipe (and my process)

Prepare the meats. Here is where we’re bending the flavor-profile like a jedi. Typically, goetta calls for half pork and half beef. That’s fine, but I’m swimming in good quality pork, and so I used no beef, and all pork this time (with the addition of pork skin, chicken hearts, and livers.)

I typically grind all my meats for goetta, but you can buy and use ground.  For this recipe, it calls for a little over 2 lbs of meat. Here is what I ended up with this round.

1.5 pounds of 50/50 pork/fat.
(go 1 pound pork, .5 pound beef if you have)

.2 pound of chicken hearts
(I’ll go with pork heart next time!)

.3 pound chopped pig skin

For me, the skin is required. Not only because my childhood goetta calls for it, but the skin renders out an amount of collagen during cooking that breaks down with the fat to help congeal the final loaves and lets the goetta lube up the skillet more on its own. I always have an abundance of skin, and it keeps indefinitely vac’d in the freezer.

I grind the above through a course die. I don’t worry about keeping the meat and fat cold for grinding like we would for sausage.

Grind into a bowl, then add

.2 pound hand-diced chicken livers
(any liver you have will work)

It’s important here to not run the livers through the grinder. Hand dice, then mix into the farce. We want small chunks that don’t disappear into the goetta. Put in fridge until you need it.

Mix and aerate often during cooking

Put a large pot on the stove and add

  • 6 cups water
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper
  • Chicken boullion cube (optional)

Bring to a boil, hold for a few minutes until the boullion is dissolved, then add:

  • 2 cups steel cut oats (pinhead oats)
  • 1/2 cup bulgar wheat

You can skip the bulgar wheat and use 2 and 1/2 cups of pinhead oats. Reduce heat to low and put a lid on. Stir periodically until the oats have absorbed all the water. It will be thick and will stick to your pan on the bottom. Be scraping it up as you stir using a large metal spoon. This won’t take long (maybe 10 minutes tops). Many recipes in the past had us doing this for 1-2 hours! I feel like this is overcooking and a contributor to a starchy, sticky mess. It’s OK that the oats still have some stiffness before we add the meat. In another bowl, measure and combine:

  • More pepper if you like
  • 1 large onion, diced finely
  • 1/2 tsp sage (go fresh if you have it)
  • 4-5 bay leaves
  • 1 tsp MSG (Accent) Yes, I went there this time (if you think Glier’s is too salty, skip this)
  • Any other spice variants to your liking (I added nothing)
Grinding pig skin and pork, not seen ar the chicken hearts.
Frozen pig skin
This was a past attempt. It all fell apart. Delicious, but not there yet

Once the oats have absorbed the water,  it will be thick! Add 1 more cup of water to the meat farce along with all of the spices you measured and mix until integrated. Then, add all to the oats. Mix very well while still cooking on low.

Once everything is mixed, I transferred to a crockpot on high for 2 hours. This includes the time it takes for the crockpot to get up to heat.

You want to stir well at least every 30 minutes during this time. I still used my spoon to scrape the sides of the crockpot as the thick mixture will be evaporating more water out while it cooks. This is good.

Again, you know it’s done when you take a spoonful of the mush and drop it on top, and it doesn’t quickly integrate back in. Cut the heat and prepare your loave pans. I have used these stoneware mini bread pans that my wife has. They are perfect size and shape to make 6 loaves. I lined them with plastic wrap, and spooned the goetta filling into each, packing a little with the spoon to get the air out. I wrapped the plastic wrap over the top and put in the freezer to set.

The cook test

Goetta… cooking perfectly in my skillet!

In most of my past attempts, here is where things fall apart. I’m always excited to slice and cook up the first piece of goetta. I slice and toss in my iron skillet. It looks right. It seems to lube up the skillet the way it should. It smells awesome, both out of the freezer… and while it cooks. I wait a bit anxious to flip it and see how it comes off the skillet hoping the brown crispy side stays intact.

See a past attempt below that falls apart. This is the challenge with goetta and is the sum of all the handling of the oats, and the process employed.

I have added a pic below that is the most recent attempt. A huge success in my mind! It smells great, flips and holds together as it should, and has that crispiness outside that makes goetta what I want it to be.

Acknowledgments

During my quest for the perfect goetta, I spoke to a lot of people both on and offline. I want to thank my friend Chris N. for sharing his tips and a recent batch of goetta he made and also Johnny over at the Bakers Biscuit (recipe), who could totally relate to the goetta dilemma. Both of these guys had the advice of using less water… even only enough to swell the oats just so much before integrating with the rest of the ingredients.

I have also heard of people letting the oats soak overnight reducing the cook time on make day). I think there is merit to this.

If you have any thoughts or comments about goetta, your experience, or just a story, I’d love to hear from you. It’s my feeling that you need to be able to give a loaf of goetta to a friend and have them be able to cook it up and hold together without them having to be careful with it… or handle it a certain way. I’m sticking with this current process and recipe for now and think it has come a long way. Good luck in your own goetta endeavors.

Pig skin
Grinding beef
Grinding pig skin with beef and pork
Ground pork
Chicken boullion, water and bay, pinhead oats added
Mixing everything together.
Added in crockpot for 2 hours on high
Mix and aerate often during cooking
Everything mixed and ready for forms
Mini loave ceramic pan makes a good mold
Goetta loaded in pan and put in freezer
Test loaf ready to cook
Lubes up skillet nicely
Everything seemed to be cooking all right, but then…
It all fell apart. Delicious, but not there yet

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Filed Under: food/culinary, homesteading, how-to, recipe, Uncategorized Tagged With: food/culinary, homesteading, how-to, recipe

Make St. Marcellin Cheese

December 24, 2018 by Jason Leave a Comment

St Marcellin is a very soft and creamy cheese ready to burst out of the thin rind with the least bit coaxing. As such, it’s often shipped and bought in little crocks or ramekins to hold it all together. The feature shot above was sent to me by my friend Chris Mitchell when I sent him a round to try. Thanks Chris.

The St. Marcellin recipe I followed is from New England Cheesemaking Company here. Traditionally made from goat’s milk, it’s more common to find it made with raw cow’s milk today. Little rennet is used because coagulation is by lactic acid development and not so much enzymatic. The curd is developed for over 24 hours at room temps (72F).

I also used buttermilk culture and not the regular mesophilic culture used in many of my cheeses. The result is heaven. It only ages for about a month and is ready to eat. Some people like it aged further… and since I made a 4-gallon batch, I had enough to eat some, give some away, and still let enough age in the cave (both with and without ramekins). Mine turned out just about textbook both in taste and appearance. I’ve added captions to the photos to provide more detail.

For cheesemaking, I now use the Anova immersion circulator and I don’t know what I’d do without it. You can really control the temperature, including holding the same temperature for as long as you need, and also manage the ramping of temperatures needed in most cheesemaking. If you’re really a techie, here’s the Anova Culinary Sous Vide Precision Cooker w WI-FI and Bluetooth, the same unit, but has Wifi.

Heat the milk to 72F… but in my case, since I brought it home from the cow, I had to cool it down.
After reaching 72F, it needs to sit for about 90 mins. OK to stir periodically to keep the cream stirred in.
The rennet is added, and then it sites for just over 24 hours!
The curd is then cut. Notice not too much. The curd is still in large chunks. The pH is around 4.6 at this time.
I used my ladle to cut the curd further as I filled the molds round-robin style.
The whey slowly drains, and it sinks in the moulds.
The mould are topped up again and allowed to drain.
Keep filling the moulds until all the curd is in the moulds.
The curd is left to drain and as soon as possible, you’ll flip it. Flip 1-2 times before letting drain overnight.
The next day, I salt both sides and allow to sit still in the molds overnight again.
The next day, I remove the rounds and put in a covered container in my cave to achieve 52F and 90-95% RH.
At 12 days, the cheese has a dusting of mold. I’m still flipping twice daily.
I keep flipping the cheese twice daily.
After 15 days or so, I put a couple rounds in ramekins and covered with breathable wrap. I just wrapped all the others.
Here are the cheeses in the breathable wrap.
Here’s a smaller one that I made just to use as a test to cut into one.
Here, the cheese is pretty awesome, but notice the inner part still needs to break down a little.
Here, we’re looking at the cheese at it’s finest hour, in my opinion.

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Filed Under: cheesemaking, food/culinary, how-to Tagged With: cheesemaking, food/culinary, how-to

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About AllMorgan

AllMorgan started as a family blog to keep extended family and friends around the world apprised on what's going on at the Morgan Ranch. Over the years, it grew in to something so much more.

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Welcome to AllMorgan

AllMorgan started as a family blog to keep extended family and friends around the world apprised on what's going on at our Indiana homestead. It always been a cross between a family diary and photo … Read more

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