Monday, August 4, 2014

Salmon Candy

Well it has been a long while again. I really need to keep up with this blog. Well I have been looking for a good salmon jerky recipe to make in the Little Chief smoker my lovely wife bought me for my birthday. I kept coming back to this recipe I found for Salmon Candy. There was something about the simplicity of the recipe that kept telling me to make this recipe. Holy crap am I glad I did. This stuff is absolutely fantastic. I cannot stop eating this stuff. Do yourself a favor and try making this.


Salmon Candy

Prep Time: 12 hours curing time
Cook Time: 6 hours smoking time
  • 5 pounds skin-on salmon collars, bellies or fillets cut into strips
  • 10 ounces of kosher salt
  • 1 pound brown sugar
  • 1 cup maple syrup or birch syrup
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  1. Mix the salt and brown sugar together. Find a lidded container large enough to hold the salmon; a big tupperware works well. Lay down a layer of the salt/sugar mixture about 1/4 inch deep. Put a layer of salmon down on this, skin side up. Cover the salmon with more salt/sugar mixture. If you need a second layer of salmon, make sure the layer of salt and sugar between them is thick enough so that the pieces of salmon are not touching. Basically you are burying the salmon in salt and sugar. Cover and let cure in the fridge at least 8 hours, and overnight is better. 
  2. Remove the salmon from the cure, which will have become a slurry, and briefly rinse the fish under cold water. Pat dry with a paper towel and set the salmon on a drying rack skin side down. Let this dry in a breezy place for 2 hours. I put the racks under a ceiling fan near an open window with another fan blowing at the fish from the side. You are doing this to form a pellicle on the salmon, which helps it smoke properly. Don’t skip this step!
  3. Traditionally salmon candy is cold smoked for several days. If you can do this, go for it. You want to bring the temperature up gradually over the course of an hour or so and let it sit at around 180°F to 225°F for at least 4 hours, and up to 8 hours if you like your salmon candy harder and smokier.
  4. Every 90 minutes to 2 hours, paint the salmon with the maple syrup. This also helps to remove any albumen — the icky white stuff — that can form between the fish flakes if your smoker gets a little too hot too fast.
  5. When the salmon looks good and lacquered, typically about 6 hours, remove it to the drying racks again and paint it one last time with the maple syrup. Allow to cool to room temperature before storing. Salmon candy will last a week in the fridge, longer if vacuum sealed. It freezes well, too.