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Making Prosciutto at home with John! Part Two 

In the Kitchen with John
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Making Prosciutto - Part 2
It’s been fourteen days since I’ve salted and been curing the pork hindquarter. So every second day I’ve been draining the liquid off, adding more salt where needed, putting it back into the bag, and keeping it in a cool area. Now the salt curing is done and it’s time to rinse the salt off the prosciutto which I will do in a clean kitchen sink. You want to thoroughly rinse all the salt off with really cold water and pat it dry with paper towels. The next step will inhibit any bacterial growth, so the prosciutto will get a “vinegar bath”. Put the prosciutto into a clean tub and generously pour white vinegar over the pork leg. Make sure that you get some vinegar into the hock area. Some friends use red wine instead of vinegar whereas I have always used vinegar. I take a clean cloth to wash the vinegar into every part of the prosciutto, especially paying attention to the hock area. Once that is done, I take the pork leg and give it a very thorough drying with paper towels and get into all the crevices to make sure it is dried as best as possible.
When it is dried off, it is ready to go into the hanging cellar to chill down and lose more moisture. You can do one of two things. You can use sturdy string to tie around the hock or use a meat hook which is what I’m using. I put the meat hook in between the two bone portions in the hock. The ligament is going to keep the hook in and stop it from tearing through the meat.
In the next stage, the prosciutto is going to dry out and lose moisture which means that it’s also going to lose weight. I want it to lose about 20 percent of its’ current weight. So I weigh it and record the weight. Knowing that the meat hook weighs 5 ounces means that I will subtract that amount. I use a digital fish scale to find the weight. I will check the weight periodically, every week or two and monitor the progress until I see 20 percent of the weight come off. I hang it in my cellar where the temperature ranges from zero to five degrees Celsius. This is where it will stay for the next few months.
In part three you will see that the prosciutto will have dried and shrunk considerably. The skin and exposed meat will have firmed up and dried out quite a bit. We will then coat it with a layer of lard, a process called larding or stuccoing the outside. Then in the last stage of the drying process is where we aim to get a 35-40 percent reduction in moisture and weight lost from the prosciutto.
Thanks for joining me today. I’ll see you for the next video/blog when there is a 20 percent reduction in weight, and the pork leg is closer to being the final product. If you haven’t already watched “Part One” just click on to my RU-vid Channel to find it.

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25 фев 2021

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Комментарии : 21   
@vklakkineni
@vklakkineni 3 года назад
I was waiting for this part 2, thank you 😊
@max.perdiem
@max.perdiem 2 года назад
Thanks for the great video!
@inthekitchenwithjohn
@inthekitchenwithjohn 2 года назад
You are very welcome Jim. I appreciate you taking the time to watch it.
@vann.demarco
@vann.demarco 3 года назад
Love it, John. It's hard to beat homemade prosciutto!
@inthekitchenwithjohn
@inthekitchenwithjohn 3 года назад
Isn't that the truth!
@gjsgaming1618
@gjsgaming1618 3 года назад
Again, great video. Your directions are clear and concise. Makes it seem like anyone could to it. Looking forward to seeing the progress. Cheers!
@JarrodClegg
@JarrodClegg Год назад
Great video. I can't wait for Part 3 with the larding. Also, great rep of the No Name brand vinegar.
@sildaems4306
@sildaems4306 2 года назад
Thanks for the recipe. I 'm trying @ home with belgium wild boar 😉🐗 Bon a petit!!
@jeanforget2483
@jeanforget2483 2 года назад
Awesome
@fabianasantucci1554
@fabianasantucci1554 2 года назад
I love the Prosciutto Di Parma. What would you need different to make that. would the meat need to come from Parma
@brookieeH
@brookieeH 5 месяцев назад
Hey! Great video. I had to break down my meat into chunks so it could fit in our fridge. I salted all around. Am i going to run into problems since I didn’t leave bone on? Was thinking I’ll hang with several chunks in each cloth
@inthekitchenwithjohn
@inthekitchenwithjohn 5 месяцев назад
The smaller chunks will cure much faster so you will need to keep a close eye on how they loose weight. You should still be able to create a good tasting end product. Best of success!
@susisinclair7418
@susisinclair7418 2 года назад
Hi John I've had the prosciutto in the fridge for about 9 day I'm taking it out every second day and re salting as per ure instructions., everything I'd going well, but . Ive also just made chorizo and I'm going to cure this in the same fridge but the chorizo needs to be 13C -16C at 80-85% humidity for the first 2 weeks then 75% for the rest of the curing are these temps and humidity OK for the prosciutto, or have I just complicated my life and need another curing fridge?
@inthekitchenwithjohn
@inthekitchenwithjohn 2 года назад
Hi Susi, sorry to say, yes you may have complicated things. You'll want to be consistent to the curing and humidity for each of those two meats. Good luck with things!
@manna5610
@manna5610 2 года назад
I read somewhere where you can add red wine instead of the vinegar to get the same effect but with an added taste?
@manna5610
@manna5610 2 года назад
I stopped the video too soon, you just the answered my question!. ?Thanks!
@inthekitchenwithjohn
@inthekitchenwithjohn 2 года назад
Thanks for watching my video Vince. I have a few friends that have always used red wine (they use home made wine). I'm not sure how much flavor would be added to the Prosciutto from the wine since it is wiped off after rinsing.
@pasqualekok
@pasqualekok 2 года назад
Any details about the humidity levels of the cold cellar?
@inthekitchenwithjohn
@inthekitchenwithjohn 2 года назад
Hi Paschalis, my cold cellar is around 75% humidity. Good luck with your Prosciutto!
@pasqualekok
@pasqualekok 2 года назад
@@inthekitchenwithjohn thanks for the answer John. Really good and explanatory video. Would really like to see more on meat dry-aging, bacon, guanciale etc. Also your cellar and maturation chamber setup
@MrTarkus007
@MrTarkus007 2 года назад
don't forget the pepper on the prosciutto
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