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Makin’ Bacon
Posted By Contributing Author
On January 13, 2013 @ 11:10 pm
Category: Breakfast,Homesteading,Meats,Recipes
ReadyNutrition.com
This article generously contributed by www.YourPrepperHalf.com [1]

If you are a survivalist and a hunter, you know that wild game may be what feeds you and your family when times get hard. As a hunter myself, I know what it takes to kill and dress both small and large game; nothing like a venison roast is there?
But in order to make the most out of a kill, we must try to use the entire animal. Most people have probably never tried to make their own bacon; it’s far better than store bought.
Curing your own bacon from scratch is fun and not as difficult as you might think. You’ll need a whole animal belly; I am using a domestic organic pork belly for this recipe. Your butcher will probably have to order you one as they are rarely found on supermarket shelves.

You’ll also need a few easy-to-obtain ingredients and a smoker/BBQ capable of smoking at between 150°-200°F. In a SHTF situation, a smoker might not be the best idea so you can leave that off if desired.
Time. 2 hours prep, seven days of curing, 1.5 2 hours of smoking.
Ingredients
* You can buy curing salt at http://www.butcher-packer.com [2]
Basic dry-cure is a mix of kosher salt, sugar and pink salt. Pink in this case refers to curing salt, which is regular table salt with 6.25% sodium nitrite added which dyed pink for safety. This is a component you can’t leave out. The smoking method holds the meat near the so-called “danger zone” for several hours and the nitrites prevent bacteria from growing.
To make the basic dry-cure mix, use the following:
You need about 1/4 cup of the dry-cure mix for this recipe.
Curing salt…what is that? Curing salt is a salt mixture containing sodium nitrate. But what you may not know is that not only are the fears over nitrates totally exaggerated, but “nitrate-free” products can in fact contain many times more nitrates than traditional products.
Sodium nitrate is a type of salt that happens to be a exceptionally effective food preservative; it’s been used for decades. A biologically occurring mineral, sodium nitrate is present in all kinds of vegetables (root veggies like carrots as well as leafy greens like lettuce) along with all types of fruits. Essentially, anything that grows in the ground draws sodium nitrate out of the soil.

One thing that happens when sodium nitrate is used as a curing agent is that the sodium nitrate is converted to sodium nitrite. It’s sodium nitrite that actually contains the properties that make it a good preservative. Interestingly, the sodium nitrate that we consume through fruits and, vegetables is transformed to sodium nitrite by our digestive process. So when we eat fruits and vegetables our bodies produce sodium nitrite.
Preparation

This article generously contributed by www.YourPrepperHalf.com [1]
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[1] www.YourPrepperHalf.com: http://yourprepperhalf.com/guest-post/makin-bacon
[2] http://www.butcher-packer.com: http://www.butcher-packer.com/
[3] Image: http://preppingtosurvive.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/dscn0053.jpg
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