First attempt at Charcuterie – Lamb Proscuitto

by ttubar

27 Comments

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  2. I’m not so convinced that I have had success here. I pretty much followed this guys guide: [https://gastrochemist.com/winter-cured-lamb-prosciutto/](https://gastrochemist.com/winter-cured-lamb-prosciutto/)

    Without the addition of any nitrates, but with about 1 or 2 months sitting in the cure (my curing fridge wasnt ready), and then about 2-3 months curing. I think the error I made was that the curing happened above 70% RH. I was away for the final 4-5 weeks that it was curing as well so I cant say how the humidity was for that period obviously.

    That green mould concerns me, it doesn’t smell particularly amazing either. It has a strong mushroom smell. I’m doing a tiny tiny taste test at the moment and it tastes okay but I am waiting in case I end up poisoning myself.

  3. It does look rank but the inside looks fine. Maybe occasional washing with vinegar or similar would have helped here. I’d probably eat that tbh, though not the casing 😀

    Edit: this is not medical advice, I am the human dustbin, I’ve never had food-poisoning in my life, take anything I say on the subject with a pinch of salt.

  4. I know from curing Italian sausage that white and green mould is ok but black is bad.. looks black..

  5. thelizardlarry on

    How does it smell? The last time I had 3d colored mold like that it smelled like alien gasoline when I opened it up.

  6. PerfectlySoggy on

    Personally, I wouldn’t eat that. Green mold on charcuterie – on anything, really – concerns me.

    Bloom can vary in color, but usually it’s shades of white/grey/beige. When you start seeing green, blue, pink, etc, it gets dangerous.

  7. Chemical-Arm-154 on

    You do you but the mold does look concerning. Humans are resilient though so if it doesn’t kill you this time, it doesn’t mean that it won’t.

  8. My job is literraly working with charcuterie, and let me tell you black mold (especially with this uneven texture) is not a good sign, it can mean there was an excess of humidity and depending on the parameters, it can alter taste but also make the meat unsuitable for consumption.

    I would not eat it, even if the taste is somewhat okay, especially after looking at the second picture, this looks done and wasn’t dried properly.

  9. Yeah, this is why people used to die a lot before food standards became a thing.

    This’ll fuck you up. Don’t eat this.

  10. Undercover_in_SF on

    I’m not a member of this sub, but the algorithm decided I would like it.

    At first glance, I thought this was /r/plumbing and someone pulled that out of their drain!

  11. imisswhatredditwas on

    Try duck prosciutto first, or a flat pancetta they’re real easy and cure pretty quick

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