Blog

  • Salami Day 2025

    So same setup as previous years, probably with some changes to location because my place is too small.

    Some things remain the same :

    • You need to turn up to at least one of the days – it’s all about having fun on the day – if you really really want salami but can’t make it, find someone to take your spot and have them be there on the day, and pay them – perhaps in salami ? 🙂
    • Need to have transferred money into the account prior to the day – details for the account on the WhatsApp group.

    Things to bring :

    • Apron
    • Sharp knife – boning knives are good
    • Something to drink if you want, beer wine etc
    • Decent shoes that don’t mind a bit of dropped pork fat

    Things supplied :

    • Breakfast
    • Lunch
    • Cocktails
    • Snacks
    • All the salami stuff

    Basic outline :

    • We pickup the pork either that morning, or the day before.
    • Start around 9am, and go until we finish – hopefully by 5, but has been later, and has been earlier
    • Process for the day is :
      • Cut the meat off the bones and dice
      • Mince
      • Add spices and mix
      • Stuff into casings
      • Hang them in the shed
    • We all then come back in 6-8 weeks :
      • Remove the casing
      • Vacuum seal
      • Divide up amongst everyone
      • More eating, drinking and being merry
    • Take your salami home and eat 🙂

    All the previous years were that we did a 1/4 pig per share, and the pigs were around 65-70 kgs, so we got about 25-30 salami out of that ( plus lunch ribs, bones for smoking and stock, perhaps bacon too, pork skin for crackle all day ).

    As a guide, last year we did 5.5 pigs, and spent :

    • $4200 on pork.
    • $1200 on skins, spices and vac seal bags.
    • $300 on misc bits and pieces ( breakfast, sugar, wine, cocktails )
    • $500 on a bench top and some tubs

    We had a bit leftover from last year, and so this year we’d like to get a bench top crimper if there’s any left over, but the free range pork will be more expensive. Going with about the same cost as last year as a guess.

    This year :

    • We’ve split it into two options :
      • “Regular Share” – equivalent to roughly the same as last year so about 1/4 pig – $300
      • “Half Share” – equivalent to half of that – $150
    • It won’t be exactly 1/4 of a pig, as we’ll try to get larger ones, so 120+ kgs, but I’ll work it out to be around the same as last year, kg wise.
    • We may do some bacon or may not depending on how the larger pigs end up looking like, or may even add in extra so we have bacon as well.

    We’re not locked into a recipe, and usually vary it a bit. Quite often traditional southern with fennel, but we also do some without, and capsicum paste was popular last year, so will do more of that.

  • Ham Day 2024

    Ham Day this year is Saturday, 30th of November. Start time is 10am, at Brett’s place. The first stage is just making the brine and watching it boil, so not everyone is required, if you are busy, coming early to mid afternoon is fine, enough time to inject your pork. If you can only come to pickup your pork and brine, that is fine too, as long as you can inject your pork yourself.

    Cost is $125 for a half and $250 for a whole leg. Includes pork, spices and lunch. New bank details will come on WhatsApp. Money needs to be paid by the Monday 25th, I’m ordering on the 26th.

    Everyone needs to bring :

    Everyone needs to :

    • Take your pork home on Saturday – we don’t have room to store 150 kgs or pork and 150 litres of brine.
    • Inject your own pork. We will have injectors on Saturday, but if you can’t hang around you’ll need to have your own or plan to borrow one. If you search for “ofargo meat injector”, there’s heaps of options, mostly on amazon. Make sure it’s stainless steel.
    • Keep your pork in the fridge for three weeks. Turning or re-injecting if you feel like it. You need to keep it submerged, so you can push the water level up without diluting it by adding a zip lock bag full of water – don’t dilute it. Keep the pork below the water level, put a plate or weight on top if it helps.
    • Smoke your ham either the weekend before Christmas or whenever after that you have time.

    Outline of the process :

    We buy whole and half legs of pork, and make up a brine. The brine has all the spices, salt and sugar in it, and is boiled and then cooled down with ice. Everyone gets their pork and injects it with the brine. Then it cures for three weeks. Can go a bit shorter or longer if needed. If you’re keen re-inject, as often as you can will help. Then take it out of the brine 24 hours before, rinse it off and put it in the fridge for 24 hours uncovered. Then hot smoke at 110 to internal temp of 65 degrees – could take most of a day. You can glaze it during smoking if you want. You need sample it straight out of the smoker, it’s delicious just then. You can then carve and eat straight away or chill and have cold, or reheat in the oven.

    Recipe for 50 kgs of pork :

    • 20 gloves of garlic, crushed.
    • 15 oranges, slices, skin on.
    • 2.7 kgs salt.
    • 300g curing salt.
    • 25 bay leaves.
    • 3 kgs brown sugar.
    • 10 cinnamon sticks.
    • 5 tbsp cloves.
    • 5 tbsp coriander seeds.
    • 5 tbsp mustard seeds.
    • 50g cracked pepper.
    • 50 juniper berries.

    Bring to the boil with enough water to dissolve everything. Then cool with ice, and :

    • 10 litres apple juice.

    And bring to 50 litres in total.

    Each cut of pork gets 1 litre of bring for each 1kg of pork.