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Hey all you PH's! Care to share your biltong recipes?
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Picture of Tim_Wegner
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I know this thread should probably be in the recipes section but I figured more of you would see it here!
I LOVE BILTONG and would love to have some more recipes and ideas. I 've made some pretty tasty batches but I'm still a rookie at it.

Thanks!
 
Posts: 99 | Location: McCleary, WA | Registered: 24 April 2004Reply With Quote
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Ingredients needed:
meat of your choice/no marbling perfered
Rock Salt
Coarse Ground Black Pepper
Coarse Ground Coriander
Vinegar (preferably Apple-Cider vinegar)
First, be sure to sterilize all your hooks, knives, and working surfaces by washing well in hot water and soap.

Get some half-inch thick strips of beef (silverside - called London Broil in the US). Make sure it's cut with the grain. The pieces should be about 6 inches long. Liberally sprinkle rock-salt on each side of the pieces of meat and let them stand for an hour. The longer you let it stand the saltier it will become.

After the hour, scrape off all the excess salt with a knife (don't soak it in water!). Then get some vinegar - preferably apple-cider vinegar, but any vinegar will do. Put some vinegar in a bowl and dip the strips of meat in the vinegar for a second or so - just so that the meat is covered in the vinegar. Hold the biltong up so that the excess vinegar drips off.

Then sprinkle ground pepper and ground coriander over the meat on all sides.

Once you have done this, the meat is ready to dry. There are several methods of drying. One is to hang it up on a line in a cool place and have a fan blow on it. This method is a bit difficult because if the air is humid the meat can spoil. The method I use is a home-made 'Biltong Box'. This is basically a sealed wooden box (you can use cardboard if you like) with holes in it and a 60w lightbulb inside. Just hang the meat at the top of the box, and leave the lightbulb on at the bottom. The heat from the lightbulb helps dry the meat (even in humid weather) in about 3-4 days. Remember, the box must be closed on all 6 sides except for a few holes (as per the diagram below). The whole theory behind this method is that hot dry air rises thus drying the biltong. The holes are quite important as they promote good air circulation in the box.

Click here for pictures of a working biltong box!


0.4 meter across
_______________
FRONT VIEW | |
|x-----------x| < ------- Hang biltong here on a wire
| B B |
1.0 meter | I I |
high | L L |
| T T |
| O O |
| N N |
| G G |
| |
|x-----------x| <------- Put a piece of perforated wood
60W lightbulb | @ | covering the lightbulb here. This
goes here --> | ||| | prevents blood from dropping on the
--------------- lightbulb. Make sure the wood has
a few holes in ot to let the hot air
rise.


0.4 meter across
_______________
SIDE VIEW | |
| O O O |
| | <-------- Holes at the top of the box on
1.0 meter | O O O | both sides.
high | |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| O O O | < -------- Holes at the bottom of the box
60W Lightbulb | | by the lightbulb on both sides.
goes here --> | O O O |
---------------

You'll know when the biltong is ready when it is quite hard, but still a bit moist inside. Of course, some people like it 'wet' and others like it 'dry'. It's all a matter of taste. Most South Africans I know like it in between - basically just a bit red inside. If it has gone green, then the meat has spoiled (i.e. don't eat it).

Variations include the above recipe, but add flavours like Worcestershire sauce, BBQ sauce, tabasco sauce, soy sauce, etc.. Just brush these sauces on after applying the vinegar using a basting brush.


Cry 'Havoc,' and let slip the dogs of war;
That this foul deed shall smell above the earth
With carrion men, groaning for burial.
 
Posts: 1107 | Location: Houston Texas | Registered: 06 March 2005Reply With Quote
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My PH in Namibia used a pre-packaged dry cure on my 2 kudu. He just tossed the strips in an old Igloo cooler and the boys hung 'em up to dry. I don't remember the brand name or the ingredients. However that process might not work, or work well in climates with lots of humidity. Northern Namibia in September had almost no humidity to speak of and very hot temps.
 
Posts: 4799 | Location: Lehigh county, PA | Registered: 17 October 2002Reply With Quote
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Picture of Tim_Wegner
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Thanks for the tips! Good idea on the box. I'll have to make one up when I get a spare weekend.
 
Posts: 99 | Location: McCleary, WA | Registered: 24 April 2004Reply With Quote
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My mouth is starting to water.


Elephant Hunter,
Double Rifle Shooter Society,
NRA Lifetime Member,
Ten Safaris, in RSA, Namibia, Zimbabwe

 
Posts: 955 | Location: Houston, Texas, USA | Registered: 13 February 2002Reply With Quote
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Here is everything you always wanted to know about biltong.

http://www.biltongmakers.com/
 
Posts: 4799 | Location: Lehigh county, PA | Registered: 17 October 2002Reply With Quote
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