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Thanks Will, turned out tasty. Three hours infused a good amount of smoke into the neck, but it really needed the dwell and salsa verde simmer to become tender. Next time I think will simply let the lamb neck chuckle away at 250 and see how long it takes to pullable.YourPalWill wrote:Beautiful, Gary! I picked up some lamb neck at the B&L last weekend and froze it not really knowing how to cook it except for a braise which isn't very summer friendly. I think that you have nailed it (as usual).
Good eye Dick, I asked about the size of the tongue myself.budrichard wrote:Your beef tongue came from an animal more the size of a veal?
C2,Cathy2 wrote:Lamb tongues are pretty small. Would you have smoked a beef tongue?
Sazeracsazerac wrote:Does the post-smoke simmer boil away the smoke flavor that penetrates through the outer layer?
G Wiv wrote:Lots of ways to repurpose the smoky liquid, beans, lentils, polenta, rice would all absorb the flavor. Of course this occurred to me moments after I tossed the smoke infused liquid. Next time out I plan on making a pot of black or pinto beans and turning that into refried beans as accompaniment.
sazerac wrote: Simmering first doesn't make much sense - as then the cooked tongue wouldn't pick up smoke. Does the post-smoke simmer boil away the smoke flavor that penetrates through the outer layer?
buzzd wrote:sazerac wrote: Simmering first doesn't make much sense - as then the cooked tongue wouldn't pick up smoke. Does the post-smoke simmer boil away the smoke flavor that penetrates through the outer layer?
actually simmer(poach) 1st works pretty good--peel and then smoke- have done it numerous times--but with larger tongues
stevez wrote:buzzd wrote:sazerac wrote: Simmering first doesn't make much sense - as then the cooked tongue wouldn't pick up smoke. Does the post-smoke simmer boil away the smoke flavor that penetrates through the outer layer?
actually simmer(poach) 1st works pretty good--peel and then smoke- have done it numerous times--but with larger tongues
That makes sense, too. It's similar to the fauxstami method.
The way I do smoked corned beef it is, yes. I tend to serve smoked corned beef straight from the smoker, though steam to reheat leftovers.sazerac wrote:Wait - fauxtrami is smoke first, then simmer (steam), right?
In my copy of Charcuterie* they target an internal temp of 150, no mention of 5-hours, then steam for 2-3 hours until fork tender. My smoked corned beef method, which I have been doing since 2001 or earlier, calls for smoking soaked/spice rubbed full packer cut corned beef until tender, approx 8-hours at 250.Cathy2 wrote:In Michael Ruhlman and Brian Polcyn's Charcuterie book, the pastrami is smoked for five hours, then braised/steamed to tenderness in the oven.