Team Mumu Pit Cooking Page:

How to tell dinner from a hole in the ground.

"That's the most disgusting thing I've ever seen." - Caroline Quinn, age 7

The term MUMU comes from Papua New Guinea and refers to both the earth oven and the food that is cooked in it. In 1994, we began with a test pit in the backyard. There were two competing theories for how to proceed:

Theory 1- The insulation theory: Get the rocks REALLY REALLY HOT, toss the pig in the hole and completely cover with leaves, dirt, etc, so that all the heat stays inside. You should be able to stand comfortably in bare feet on top of the pit because it's so well insulated. Pros: conserves energy. Cons: second-guessing is not an option.

Theory 2- The continuous combustion theory: Heat up the rocks. Lay in a pig. Lay in some more rocks, maybe a few leaves and embers, and then keep a fire burning over the top for the cooking period. Pros: You know it stays hot. You can probably even reach in with a meat thermometer when the fire burns down. Cons: this doesn't seem to be the traditional way. Traditional people usually know more about this kind of thing than people with "theories".

We wanted to get to a 9pm film, so Pit 1 was a "quick pit". After a brief fire, one leg-o-lamb, some sweet potatoes and corn were placed in a pit with hot rocks and Theory 2 (continuous combustion) was applied. After 3 hours the veggies were excellent, but the lamb was still a bit pink and got a some help from the indoor kitchen oven to finish.
   

Time for library (and internet) research

      You searched for the WORD: pig roast  "ANU Library Catalogue"
    
      TITLE        A dissertation upon roast pig.
      AUTHOR       Lamb, Charles, 1775-1834.
      PUBLISHED    London : Sampson Low, Marston, [n.d.]
      DESCRIPT     62 p.
      MENZIES rare book       Mortlake Collection       

After Pit 20 Paul Maragakis added this piece of folklore to our pit cooking knowledge: In Greece, kleftiko is a traditional way of cooking lamb in a pit (that was later trivialized to cooking in a pot or in foil). The art developed from habits of thieves (kleftes) in the mountains of Crete. The thieves would prepare a hot pit before stealing the lamb or goat. Once the animal was taken, it was quickly buried in the pit. The unlucky owners of the animal could not locate the roast because of the lack of smoke during cooking. The lucky thieves would have a feast once the fuss settled down and the lamb cooked to perfection.

Pit 2: clearly another test was needed before attempting a pig. We enlarged the pit and ringed it with rocks. The second fire was stoked and burned for two hours. With a hot rock inside, a turkey was wrapped in silver beet leaves (no banana leaves could be obtained). The turkey was placed in the hot rocks, covered with pine needle insulation, and buried for 8 hours with sweet potatoes, corn, parsnips and potatoes and Theory 1 (insulation) was employed.

This was a great success. The turkey was cooked to perfection, falling off the bone, but still moist and juicy. Vegetables had about an 80% retrieval success. We're ready for a pig!

More Pit Cooking Photos

Warning We switched to video technology for recording Pit 3. MPEG movies may be a bit large and slow to retrieve.

Pit 3 The Pig: A pig weighing 13kg (28.66lbs) was prepared by rubbing it with mango and placing some onions and spices in the interior [MPEG]. The pig must have had a run in with Mr. Blonde, since it only had one ear. A REALLY BIG fire was built in the pit, and we heated granite rocks in it for 3 hours. We took three really hot rocks from the fire and stuck them inside the pig then wrapped it tightly with banana leaves [MPEG]. Putting the hot rocks inside the pig is really cool. Lots of smoke and sizzling sounds. Sort of like a giant "sizzling pork" dish at Full House.

Next the wrapped pig was placed in the pit with hot rocks and embers. A layer of grape vines, then pine needles was used to insulate the pit and you can see the steam coming up through the pine needles from the hot rock oven underneath [MPEG]. The whole thing was covered with dirt and cooked for 11 hours. [MPEG]. Around hour 8 we uncovered it to add vegetables. The pig appeared done at this point, but we covered it back up anyway.

When the guests arrived, we dug up dinner [MPEG1] and [MPEG2]. The pig was good, but the vegetables were not done. We are still working out how to cook the veggies (which need about 3 hours if the rocks are hot) with a pig/turkey/kangaroo that needs about 8-12 hours. Some suggestion are:

There were two extremely memorable parts: when the cooked pig was on the kitchen table, we were moving it around to try to make more space. As we moved the body, the head stuck over edge of the table....PLONK!! (sounds of screaming) pig head on floor, one grad student in need of sedatives. Joy of Cooking forgot to mention: "The roast is done when the head falls off under its own gravity."

The second "moment" came a few minutes later. Some dirt had gotten through the leaves and we were trying to figure out how to clean it. Lynn had the great idea to use the vacuum cleaner. But the highlight was when the tail got ripped from the body and sucked into the vacuum cleaner.

Otherwise it was a perfectly normal meal for about 16 people.

Pit 4 The Lamb.

Team Mumu moved on to the "two pit theory", one 12 hour pit sufficient to cook a 20kg (44lb) lamb, and one 6 hour pit for the 30kg (66lb) of vegetables. This worked exceptionally well, and both lamb and vegetables were done when the guests arrived. For additional variety, a stuffed chicken was placed inside the lamb.

Note that both John and Dave are wearing sandals while digging up dinner. Safety first :-)!

Pit Summary:

  

General info for succesful mumus:


More Pit Cooking Photos



Brought to you by Team Mumu
Lynn <>{
John
Dave
Tracey
Ginger