Schiffala (also Schiffela, from the Alsatian for ‘shoulder’) is a smoked pork shoulder — one of the foundational preparations of Alsatian charcuterie and home cooking, traditionally served with braised turnips (navets glacés) or sauerkraut as a winter centrepiece. The preparation begins long before the kitchen: the pork shoulder (palette or épaule) is dry-cured in a mixture of coarse salt, saltpetre (for colour preservation), sugar, juniper berries, and black peppercorns for 7-10 days in a cool cellar, turned daily. After curing, it is cold-smoked over beechwood or fruitwood (pear and apple woods are traditional in Alsace) for 3-5 days at temperatures below 25°C, producing a firm, mahogany-skinned joint with an intense smoky fragrance. The smoked shoulder is then either simmered or braised to tenderness. The traditional simmering method: the schiffala is placed in a large pot of cold water, brought to a gentle simmer (never a boil, which toughens the exterior while leaving the interior raw), and cooked for 2-2.5 hours for a 1.5kg piece, until a probe slides into the thickest part with no resistance. The braising method, increasingly preferred: the shoulder is placed on a bed of sliced onions and root vegetables in a covered casserole, moistened with Riesling or water to come halfway up, and braised at 150°C for 3 hours until falling apart. The accompanying turnips are peeled, quartered, and glazed in butter and sugar (glacer à brun) until caramelised, then simmered in a ladleful of the pork cooking liquid until tender. The finished schiffala is carved into thick slices against the grain, revealing the rosy-pink interior and the smoke ring just beneath the surface, served with the glazed turnips and a generous spoonful of hot mustard — the sharp Dijon cutting through the rich, smoky pork with perfect Alsatian logic.
Dry cure 7-10 days with salt, saltpetre, juniper, pepper. Cold smoke over beechwood 3-5 days below 25°C. Simmer gently (never boil) for 2-2.5 hours, or braise at 150°C for 3 hours. Serve with glazed turnips and hot mustard. Carve against the grain.
If the schiffala is very salty after curing, soak in cold water for 4-6 hours before cooking, changing the water twice. The braising liquid makes an exceptional base for lentil soup. For a modern presentation, shred the braised meat and serve in a warm salad with frisée, walnuts, and a Riesling vinaigrette.
Boiling instead of simmering, toughening the exterior. Insufficient curing time, producing bland meat. Smoking at too high a temperature (hot smoking changes the texture entirely). Not soaking overly salty specimens before cooking. Carving with the grain.
La Cuisine Alsacienne (Simone Morgenthaler)