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Strange statement in a popular charcuterie book

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atomicsmoke

Master of the Pit
OTBS Member
Apr 3, 2014
4,313
1,235
I tried to post this on the book review thread; but it didn't take it.

I was reading up on Great Sausage Recipes and Meat Curing by Rytek Kutas (you can read table of contents and intro pages on books.google). Thought of buying it. Until I read this referring to cold smoking "If you can't cure it, don't smoke it. It doesn't matter if it's meat, fish, poultry, cheese or vegetable". Needless to say I won't be getting this book.
 

daveomak

SMF Hall of Fame Pitmaster
OTBS Member
★ Lifetime Premier ★
Nov 12, 2010
27,123
4,981
That statement is appropriate and factual..... What is your problem with it....

Mostly, it is a "WAKE UP" statement to folks that are starting in the smoking hobby, to make them aware of the dangers that "May" be associated with smoking foods...

Smoking food, by definition, is done in the temperature range of 50 ish to 140 ish.... The temperature zone when bacteria, pathogens etc. flourish.... In a reduced oxygen atmosphere, like smoking foods produces, botulism can flourish.....

Dave
 

atomicsmoke

Master of the Pit
OTBS Member
Thread starter
Apr 3, 2014
4,313
1,235
Factual? Based on documented cases of botulism from COLD SMOKING cheese? Please don't respond with the mascarpone cheese problems.

Or these days factual means "if A happens under conditions B it is likely to happen under conditions C"?

Are you saying that one should cure cheese with nitrite before cold smoke it?

Was there a study done to evaluate the behaviour of botulism spores/bacteria under cold smoking conditions? You know ...evaluate bacteria activity and presence of toxin right after smoking not after vacuum packed for a month?
 

bama bbq

Master of the Pit
Sep 24, 2011
2,352
72
I have the book. There are some great recipes in it. I've used several with great success. Some info conflicts with other sources but overall a good reference. Who's to say who is correct?
 
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brooksy

Master of the Pit
Mar 17, 2014
1,195
49
Why would you cure a vegetable? So I can't take a head of broccoli and cold smoke it?
 

red dog

Smoking Fanatic
Jul 24, 2011
702
38
I think you are missing out on a lot of very useful information by refusing to buy the book because you disagree with one statement. I don't agree with everything I read on this forum but that doesn't keep me from reading it. If the author was touting a practice that was potentially harmful that would be another matter. But to overly err on the side of caution is forgivable.
 

briankinlaw

Fire Starter
Jan 17, 2011
47
14
As a rule you only cold smoke cured meats and this includes Cheese.  I would refer back to what my mother told me once about recipes... Just because someone  writes a book of recipes does not mean they know what their talking about.  She said lots of authors write recipes and cant even cook themselves.  I have also found this to be true survival information... Lots of people write about it but have never put any of it into practice.  
 
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