So our end results of 2025 salami are :
- 33 People put in money this year.
- They bought in total 52 $150 shares of pork, will Bill winning the award of most shares with 4.
- One share was roughly equivalent to a half last year, making this into a “1” share was simpler.
- We spent :
- $520 on misc stuff, ice, bags, rolls, bacon eggs, rib supplies etc.
- $389 on a new crimper – which broke and I still have to take back.
- $370 on a second wooden table and legs so we can do more salami in a day 🙂
- $300 on vac seal rolls
- $700 on casings, spices, capsicum etc and various ingredient sundries
- $250 on booze for the all important breakfast cocktails
- And ….
- $5900 on pork.
- One massive pig from Amber Creek farm – $2000
- One only slightly less massive pig from Yarra Valley – $1250
- Four small pigs – from Maxi.
- We made
- Ribs we ate on the day.
- Ribs we’ll eat on Saturday
- Bacon : should be enough for 1-1.5 kg piece each to take home.
- Pork Crackle – two massive bags.
- About 650 sticks of salami 🙂
- We made 9 different types of salami – each one is numbered, so if you need to know what you’re eating :
- Every Batch contains : Salt, Pepper, Red Wine And Cure.
- #1 – Maxi Pig – Chilli, Fennel, 1 Garlic Jar.
- #2 – Amber Creek Pig – Chilli, Fennel, 1 Garlic
- #3 – Amber Creek Pig – Plain
- #4 – Amber Creek Pig – 1 Sweet Capsicum, 1 Hot
- #5 – Maxi Pig – 2 Hot Capsicum, 1 Sweet, Dried Garlic
- #6 – Maxi Pig – 1 Hot Capsicum, 2 Sweet, 120g Garlic
- #7 – Maxi Pig – 4 jars 400g Garlic, Fennel
- #8 – YV Pig – 4 jars 400g Garlic, Fennel
- #9 – YV Pig – 120g Dried Garlic, 400g Chilli
You’ll get a random-ish mix of stuff, but everyone should get at least one of each.
Some didn’t work as well as others, there’s a few that had holes, but overall it was good to try new recipes.
Our Notes for 2026 :
- Not sure about the really big pigs. The Amber Creek one was interesting, but expensive. Hard to know yet if it made a difference to the end result.
- Hanging was odd this year, the day 1 stuff didn’t grow any mould at all, day 2 did normal.
- Some of them were a bit soft when we started to wrap them, we marked a few as “soft” on the package, they’ll make better cooked salami than sliced for the table, but give it a go anyway.
- Some seemed soft but just had a lot of fat – perhaps we had our ratio too high for some. This meant we hung them longer, so the meat ended up too dry, which meant an odd mix of soft fat and dry meat. I’m guessing they’ll improve with time, but I think we reduce fat content next year and better control ratios.
- Having a mix of large and small casings was harder to manage, meaning the larger ones took too long to hang and weren’t done till September. Even though they were too soft, another 2 weeks in late August / early September was probably too long, so now may be over dry ( 3, 4 and 9 ).
- So next year maybe all just small casings, or do large on first day only.
- We need to either use mould in the casing soak or use the preservative to avoid mould altogether.
- We did 4 jars of capsicum paste and it was probably too much, maybe half that next time – 1 jar per 10kg of meat.
- We need to keep the meat colder – need a big chest freezer.