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    Home » Meat and Game

    Smoked Lamb and Goat Tongues

    Published: Jan 7, 2018 Modified: Dec 21, 2022 Author: Alan Bergo

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    Cured, smoked lamb and goat tonguesI'm in the middle of shooting a video series for Shepard's Song Farm, mostly based around organ meats. There's currently 10 lbs of tongues in my fridge, and more showing up in a few days. For the series I did a version based on my favorite Argentinian style marinade, but I had a few extra laying around to play with so I tried out a couple things too.

    Lamb and goat tongues
    Cure the tongues & refrigerate for a few days
    Cured, smoked lamb and goat tongues
    Rinse and smoke
    Cured, smoked lamb and goat tongues
    Braise low and slow

    Cured, smoked lamb and goat tongues
    Peel & eat

    I wanted to develop a dry cure that I could put on the tongues without having to fit a gallon of liquid in my fridge, since it's already packed with meat. After two rounds of testing I have one that I like, it's a blank slate for adding other ingredients or flavors, or it can be used all by itself because smoked meat should be about 2 things: meat and smoke, well, and a little salt too.

    After the tongues are cured, I wanted to smoke them. The only problem was currently I'm without a restaurant, and with it, the ease of telling my prep cook to smoke XYZ before I come into work. Thankfully my girlfriend has a great little fireplace, and I figured I could Macgyver an at-home, low-tech hot smoker, I did, and it was easy. I've been planning on putting up a post on how to smoke things at home (without a smoker) and a couple recipes, so I'm not going to go too in depth here. The jist is: just because you don't have an expensive smoker doesn't mean you can't have world-class smoked meat for your family at home.

    If you have a smoker, you can probably smoke them a lot longer than I did here (about an hour) and they'll eventually develop a nice smoke ring and be a lot darker in color. I had some farm tobacco that I'd dried and soaked I added to the fireplace embers to add some oomph to mine since they were only going to smoke for a short amount of time since the fireplace was warm and would've dried out my tongues if I left them in all day. My advice: smoke your tongues however you like, with whatever you have available, necessity is the mother of invention.

    Cured, smoked lamb and goat tongues

    Cured, smoked lamb and goat tongues
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    Cured, Smoked Lamb or Goat Tongues

    Prep Time20 minutes mins
    Cook Time1 hour hr
    Resting Time5 days d
    Course: Appetizer, Snack
    Cuisine: German
    Keyword: Goat, Lamb bacon, Pickled Tongue
    Author: Alan Bergo

    Equipment

    • Smoker

    Ingredients

    For the brine

    • ½ gallon water
    • ½ cup salt
    • ⅛ cup pickling spices optional
    • ½ T pink salt
    • 1/1 lb brown sugar
    • 1-3 lbs lamb or goat tongues

    For finishing and braising

    • 1 tablespoon pickling spices optional
    • 1 bulb garlic halved
    • 4 cups large diced carrot onion, celery,
    • Water to cover

    Instructions

    • For the brine, toast the spices, then combine with the water, sugar, and salt and bring to a boil. Chill the brine, then submerge the tongues in it for 5 days.
    • After five days, remove the tongues from the brine, smoke for an hour at about 150-200F or longer at a lower temperature, then cover with water add the vegetables and spices and simmer until very tender, about 2.5 hours.
    • Cool the tongues in the liquid, strain the liquid and discard. Peel the tongues, wrap tightly in plastic, label, date, and reserve until needed. The heart can also be frozen or will keep in the fridge for 5 days.

    Cured, smoked lamb and goat tongues

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    Chef Alan Bergo

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