Well got bored as didnt get the boat out with work so decided to make some homemade bacon. Quite a difference to store bought stuff and who doesnt like bacon? too much bacon isnt enough.
ANyway you will need ( from my research on the web but do your own)
Pork Belly
Curing Salt
1/4 Cup of Maple Syrup
1/4 CUp of brown sugar
(other spices if you like)
Hardest thing is to work out ratio of curing salt to pork belly and where to get curing salt from, there are suppliers around Brisbane (Vadals) but i got some handfuls from the local butcher. Some recipies have only curing salt and some have a combination of that and Kosher Salt ( ie without iodine)
Curing ratio of curing salt I used is to add about approx 3/4 Tablespoon for every half kilo of meat ( others say for 2.5 kilos of belly 2 ounces Kosher Salt and 2 teaspoons of Curing Salt) I ended up using about 3 1/2 tablespoons for a 2.2 kilo belly.
Anyway rub the pork belly with all the ingredients, place in Zip Lock bag in fridge for 7 days ( turn it every day) Dont worry about the liquid forming. Take it out, rinse very well, test for saltiness if you like with a test fry, ( if too salty soak it ) and place on drying rack like wifes biscuit tray and put back into fridge for another 24 hours. You do this to form a pellicle on the bacon for the smoke. I just rinsed it well and dried in fridge and it didnt turn out too salty.
After that its basically smoke it very slow on the webber (or oven if dont have one but you wont get the smoke),, its a dry smoke not gettting over 200F. I used hickory wood . Smoke until bacon gets internal temp of 145-150 and then cut of rind ( make pork crackiling with that!) and cool it quickly ( i put on ice) then into fridge, then slice as thick as you want.
Here are pics of the process , cut it thick, has a nice smokey flavour, tasted great and isnt watery like some you get.
PS: Think you should satisfy yourselves with curing salt ratios. ( One American site says 1 Tablespoon of Mortons curing slat for every pound or half kilo, others say its too much) Some use a ratio of that and Kosher salt.
Cheers
Mike