We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Will hell be everlasting? All the way back in the Old Testament, Daniel 12:2, “Many of those who sleep in the dust of the ground will awake, these to everlasting life, but the others to disgrace and everlasting contempt.” Matthew 25:46 “These will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.” In this verses, the word translated “eternal” is the same one used for both heaven and hell. Heaven and hell parallel each other for eternity. They both stand or fall together. Jesus in Matthew 18:8 calls hell and “eternal fire.” Three times, Mark says of those in in hell, “Their worm will not die” (Mk. 9:44, 46, 48; cf. Isa. 66:24). When Jude speaks of false teachers in hell he says “for whom the black darkness has been reserved forever” (Jude 13). 2 Thessalonians 1:9, “These will pay the penalty of eternal destruction, away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of His power.”
Randy Smith

Brine Cure for Bacon And Hams

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats British Pork, Preserves, Meats, British 100 Lbs meat

INGREDIENTS

8 lb Salt
2 lb Sugar
2 oz Saltpeter
5 ga Water; boiled but cooled

INSTRUCTIONS

Mix the pickling ingredients. In theory thicker joints, such as ham,
should have a stronger brine - make the brine up in 90% of the
quantity of water. Thinner joints, such as bacon and bath chaps,
which are the jowls of the pig, should have the mixture in 120% of
the water.
Put the meat into the brine, making sure that there are no air
pockets, put a scrubbed board on top and a big stone on top of that
to weight the meat down - DON'T use an iron weight- and leave in the
brine for 4 days per pound of each big joint. Thus each joint should
be weighed before being put in, and each removed at its appointed
date. Bacon and small joints should only be left in for two days per
pound.
After 4 or 5 days, turn the joints round in the brine, and after
every so often. If, in hot weather, the brine becomes ropey (viscous
when you put your hand in), remove meat, scrub in clean water and put
it into fresh brine.
When the meat is taken out of the brine, wash it in fresh water,
hang it up for a week in a cool dry place to dry, then, if you want,
smoke it. It can be eaten "green" ie not smoked at all. It should
keep indefinitely, but use small joints and bacon sides before hams.
Hams improve with maturing. Bacon is best eaten within a few months.
Cured hams and shoulders should be carefully wrapped in greaseproof
paper and then sewn up in muslin bags and hung in a fairly cool dry
place, preferably at a constant temperature. If you paint the outside
of the muslin bag with a thick paste of lime and water, so much the
better. Like this they will keep for a year or two and improve all
the time in flavour until they are delectable. Light turns bacon
rancid, so keep it in the dark. Keep flies off all cured meat.
Recipe from "The Complete Book of Self Sufficiency" John Seymour
Posted to MM-Recipes Digest V4 #4 by "Rfm" <Robert-Miles@usa.net> on
Feb 01, 99

A Message from our Provider:

“Forgiveness is not automatic”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?