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Designer Meats

In Houston, more and more chefs are curing their own pig products

Catalan executive chef Chris Shepherd, the man other Houston chefs call The Godfather, grabs a handful of his very own homemade sausages and starts slicing them into gauzy ribbons. Red strips of coppa fall from the meat slicer like streamers, gracefully dappled with spots of slick white fat. He hands them to me as they fall. The meaty pig's-neck sausage is dark and rich.

Catalan's Chris Shepherd is at the forefront of charcuterie in Houston.
photo by Troy Fields
Catalan's Chris Shepherd is at the forefront of charcuterie in Houston.
For Shepherd, curing his own meats is a natural extension of his desire to prepare his food with local produce.
photo by Troy Fields
For Shepherd, curing his own meats is a natural extension of his desire to prepare his food with local produce.

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Shepherd next takes a link of soppressata and removes it from its casing. Unlike the typical Italian hard-cured sausage, this version of soppressata is still soft and creamy. "It's a spreadable dry-cured meat," he says. He takes a knife and swipes a hunk of it onto a piece of hot bread that was just pulled from the oven.

The thick chunks of fat in the pork sausage immediately melt into the bread. The meat remains on top, glistening pink. Shepherd passes it over to me. I take a bite, letting the luscious meat and fat spread across my palate. It tastes unlike any other sausage I've ever eaten. Paired with a juicy nectarine, it is the perfect lunch.

For Shepherd, curing and preserving his own meats — making charcuterie — was a natural extension of his desire to prepare fresh food using local produce. As I finish the soppressata, he points to a small pile of plastic-wrapped vegetables in one corner, a grin on his face. "That's my only store-bought produce for the week," he says. For a restaurant the size of Catalan, it's not much. Soon, the rest of the fruits and vegetables start piling in from the back door, all of them from local farms.

Shepherd began sourcing his meat locally several years ago when he worked in the kitchen at Brennan's. "Randy Evans and I — who were sous chefs at the time — decided to go exploring and find some local farms here in Texas. We found a few good farms and started buying more and more and more. Once you start doing the local farming, pigs are the next steps. You say, 'Who can I get to do pigs?' You start to find smaller farms and people who are raising pigs the right way — not the Chinese whites that are processed — and from there, you learn breeds. You learn what makes the best hams, what makes the best pork bellies, what makes the best bacon."

Today, Shepherd buys his hogs from area purveyors like Atkinson's, Revival Meats, Hatterman and Jolie Vue, some of which also provide much of the restaurant's produce. His ever-increasing enthusiasm for bringing the freshest food possible to the table at Catalan has led Shepherd to make his own housemade charcuterie at Catalan, while at the same time becoming one of Houston's leading chefs.

As it turns out, Shepherd is following a national trend sparked by the surging popularity of British chef Fergus Henderson's nose-to-tail mantra and Michael Ruhlman and Brian Polcyn's best-selling book Charcuterie: The Craft of Salting, Smoking and Curing. The art of charcuterie is experiencing a renaissance in the United States.

But despite the fact that cured meats have been considered perfectly acceptable and safe throughout most of human history, and are an everyday facet of life throughout most of the world, here in the United States the practice is regarded as unsafe unless highly regulated, with a strict set of standards regarding time and temperature for meat preparations. There are ways around this, but they are complicated and time-consuming.

Patrick Key, bureau chief of consumer health services for the City of Houston Department of Health and Human Services, says he's cited plenty of places over the years for curing meat in-house, often at Asian restaurants, where they sometimes hang Peking ducks at room temperature. "They like to hang the duck for several days to get the skin nice and crispy," he says.

Even so, plates filled with handcrafted salami, pepperoni and soppressata are making appearances on restaurant menus all over Houston.
_____________________

James Silk and Richard Knight of Feast are sitting at a simple wood table in their dining room, their stares blanker than a fresh sheet of butcher paper. The two chefs, who are both from England, were just asked when they first became interested in charcuterie. Apparently, the question was akin to asking a fish when it got into swimming.

"When did we get into charcuterie?" Knight finally says, repeating the question.

Silk answers: "It goes with our philosophy, really. Nose-to-tail. We're foreigners," he laughs. "It's normal where we come from. It's thousands of years old. It's part of our life. It's what we grew up with."

While charcuterie might be the hot new trend appearing on restaurant menus and diners' plates across the nation, it's anything but a recent discovery. And it's never fallen out of favor in Europe, where cured meats are as common as hot dogs are in America.

Houston diners have proven to have some apprehensions and misunderstandings about the food at Feast. The restaurant experiences its share of diners who are put off by the offal and unusual cuts of meat on the menu, which extends to its charcuterie as well.

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  • 04/05/2011 8:50:00 PM

    Very good article but I think 6 pages are a little too long for the internet. Houston Restaurants

  • Melanie 06/24/2010 12:44:00 AM

    We are the most vile disgusting species - how dare we treat other species like this just because we can. Just because they are furred, feathered or finned does not entitle us to mutilate and treat living breathing beings like this. Shame on you!

  • DearKatharineSucks 06/17/2010 10:38:00 PM

    Dear KatharineSucks, Let’s examine the facts here: 1)These chefs who were interviewed are all grown, adult men 2)They spoke freely and knowingly ON THE RECORD about their work with meat 3)These men are graduates of culinary school or, at the very least, have ServSafe or Food Manager certification 4)They know what is legal and not legal due to their food manager/ServSafe certification 5)Katharine works for a newspaper; is, in fact,a journalist who was writing a NEWS story and they KNEW that with this interview they were publicizing their work with meat – both the legal and illegal aspects of it Now,help all of us understand how any aspect of this is "backstabbing" and, while you're at it, explain why they think they have any right whatsoever to whine, complain, bitch, moan or otherwise throw a fit if the health department pays them a visit? And who do you think you are to basically threaten someone for doing their job??? It’s not like she wired herself up and went undercover to break a story on the shenanigans of Houston chefs and off-temp meat! Anyway, I imagine ALL of the restaurants are getting more business from this article than harassment from the retards at the health dept (picture the Three Stooges here). In fact, my partner and I purposely went to Stella Sola this past weekend to try their charcuterie plate and are planning a trip to Catalan this coming weekend to do the same thing! We found the article informative and hunger-provoking and are excited about trying ALL of the charcuterie being produced around Houston. We’re probably like most people who don’t give two shits about legal or not, as long as the food is good and we enjoy eating it!!!

  • KatharineSucks 06/16/2010 4:28:00 AM

    I cannot believe you would put this article on the front page. You tell the Chefs you want to write a story about them and then you backstab them with this article and now they are all getting fined and are being found in predicaments thanks to you. You will get yours.

  • Nancy 06/16/2010 2:55:00 AM

    I have to agree with all the positive comments above, this is one of the best food articles I have read in quite some time. I'm passing this on to my foodie friends. Thanks!

  • Richard Doll 06/11/2010 5:57:00 PM

    Oh Hell, I have to be the first one to say "I miss Rob"? LOL, seriously, this is the best article on food in the Htown Press since Rob left. Well done; bravo! Excellent article. Thank you Katherine, I sincerely appreciate your writing this excellent piece.

  • J.R. 06/11/2010 3:05:00 PM

    Thank you, I learned and enjoyed reading this. Great job again!

  • JWellingdown 06/11/2010 6:45:00 AM

    Well done, Katharine! The health codes need to be updated; they were probably enacted during Sinclair Lewis' 'Jungle' days when sanitation issues were actually a problem, especially with pork, though that's just a guess. I'm curious about the cured commercial meats we see in Spec's, Central Market, everywhere really (Colombus brand etc) . They have the casings like they've been cured, but what's the issue with them that allows them to be sold? Also, isn't this an issue with cheese too, or I should say "cheese", in the US. It's all dead really, right? There's no real raw-milk, live bacteria cheese; it's all been pasteurized thanks to big bro at the Health Dept?

  • Laker 06/11/2010 12:06:00 AM

    nicely written

  • Jim 06/10/2010 11:47:00 PM

    Great article! I liked it better when I read it the first time five years ago on the cover of My Table magazine though.

  • Alejandro 06/10/2010 5:23:00 PM

    After my previous comment, I must say that the photos look much better in print than they do online. Good job.

  • Mike 06/10/2010 6:51:00 AM

    Fantastic article. I knew about most of the charcuterie mentioned, but there are also a few new dishes on my must-try list now.

  • AynSavoy 06/10/2010 5:09:00 AM

    Great piece, Katharine! I'm definitely missing these Houston restaurants right now, but I feel I'll even be better informed while exploring the charcuterie scene in my new city.

  • Rosemary 06/10/2010 2:51:00 AM

    Awesome article. I've had the charcuterie plate at Catalan in the past and loved it. Thank you for the great information on the whole process, which I was unaware of until now. Being an "eat now, ask questions later (or not at all)" kinda gal it really added an a whole new appreciation level to the experience.

  • Kyle C 06/09/2010 10:01:00 PM

    Sometimes the truth is a bit negative.

  • 06/09/2010 9:35:00 PM

    Katharine's writing has always been a step above Robb's, but I certainly don't mean that as an insult to Robb. He is so interesting because of his dedication to food, particularly the local culture of food. Katharine is a great reporter and a gifted writer. She makes reading HP/EOW worth it for me. I also suspect KS would prefer not to have comments as negative as kyle and nate's under her fantastic piece on meats.

  • Alejandro 06/09/2010 9:23:00 PM

    The fake HDR makes the poor chefs look like zombies. Regular photos would have sufficed and you guys should've saved the fake HDR for some other article. Photos aside, the article is absolutely fascinating, eye opening and educational. Thank you for this wonderful insight into the world of charcuterie!

  • Mary 06/09/2010 9:06:00 PM

    This is a fantastic article, Katharine. I've tried to mark HP articles on Delicious before and it doesn't work, the links change to the current issue. And the HP search function isn't all that effective. Maybe I just need to pick up a hard copy to keep for future reference.

  • Nate the Snake 06/09/2010 8:24:00 PM

    Interesting article. Great point kyle c. All those stupid classless plebians wishing a world class food writer and critic would keep working for the HoustonPress! Idiots. Shut up and take the new awesome frat boy critiques.

  • USA1 06/09/2010 8:08:00 PM

    Great article, really enjoyed it. I'm going to char some tender animals and/or fowl over an open flame this evening in your honor, feufoma. 8^) Mmmmmm! Can't wait!

  • Feufoma 06/09/2010 7:50:00 PM

    Meat is indeed murder. Eating pig (cured or not)? That's just nasty and mean to boot.

  • kyle c 06/09/2010 7:45:00 PM

    Great article. I wonder how long it will take for some moron to say "I miss Robb" this time.

 

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