Some time ago, I was muddling through my attempt at preparing one of the simplest dry cured sausage in Ruhlman's Charcuterie, saucisson sec.  It's not fermented, just a simple mix of ground pork, garlic, salt and pepper and some curing salt.  
I have a way of turning simple things into a 3 body problem.  But,  when I finish, I usually have a robust solution in which I know more about the process variables than if I nailed it on the first try.  It's a frustrating way to learn, but learning is rarely uneventful.
The key environmental variables are 60°F, at least 60-70% relative humidity and some air movement.  I won't rehash all the past attempts buried in my archives spent trying to find that environment.  I will simply cut to the chase:  I stuffed the sausage in beef casings and lay the links on a cooling rack suspended over some water in a plastic cooler in my basement.  The open top of the high-walled container permitted air movement.  The sides of the container coupled with the puddle of water in the bottom created a naturally bounded localized cloud of moisture that registered ca. 70% according to an accurate humidity probe and the temperature in my basement is about 60°F +/- 8°F almost all year 'round.
4 weeks of aging and voila.  The sausage looks a little squat because it was on its side.  So what.  After I tasted it, didn't die, I fed it to others who enjoyed it immensely.  The only changes?  I didn't like the appearance of the wide beef middle casings - the biological reality of the appearance of these things is not pretty, I'm going back to simple small hog casings.  And, I'll be using a finer grind.  I like coarse for fresh sausage, it keeps them moist on cooking, but the dry cured, I believe, needs a finer grind.  
A peek at the newest run (smaller casings, finer grind) about a week in:

Congrats on your success - it looks like it turned out really well!
ReplyDeleteThanks Mike. Had some real French here the other night and they passed muster. I just put up another batch last Friday with the finer grind and smaller casing. It's a cool food.
ReplyDeleteLooks great, very jealous.
ReplyDeleteHey Andrew, It's a little embarrassing how difficult I made this before. Lying it down on its side also made things easier. My next batch is a week or so in, good mold so far.
ReplyDeleteNice to see I am not the only one with that kind of tasting procedure. I haven't tried that recipe yet. It is one of the many on the to-do list.
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