Replacing/changing cabin air filter for a 2023/2024 Ford Mustang Mach-E
Why
Because it’s easy enough to do by yourself and to save money. Cost adds up!
Materials and Cost
ITEM
PRICE
Purolator Boss PBC31449
$26.43 (Amazon)
Or if you’d like to stick with OEM:
Motorcraft Cabin Air Filter (Part #: FP100A)*
$30.56 (Ford) or $20.97 (PartsGeek)
*According to Ford, Part FP100A is interchangeable with FP100 and FP99
Time and Effort
Time: 5-10 minutes
Difficulty: Easy
Process
Tip: It’s best to be parked where you can comfortably open your passenger side door wide
Empty Glove Compartment
Take the stuff out of the glove compartment
Lower the Compartment
Remove Stop Arm
With the glove compartment open, look to the right side and locate the stop arm. Use a finger to pull it until it pops off
POP!
Press the Tabs
Then press the tabs on either side of the glove compartment to unhook the box
Tabs on either sideClose-up
It will swing downwards. Just leave it there. It doesn’t need to come out.
Note: If you didn’t unload the contents, everything gets dumped on the floor…
Open the Filter Cover
On either side of the uppermost, solid plastic, rectangular door are 2 tabs that keep it in place. Push aside (outwards) the plastic tabs until both sides free from the little tab. Be careful not to break anything!!
Hint: you may need to push aside any impeding wiring bundles.
The right was easy, but the left required two hands: one to push, and one to pull the filter door down
Here’s a close up of the left-side tab from my 2023 Mach-E. The wiring bundle butts up against the tab, making it difficult to remove. The 2024 was much easier without the wiring in the way as much
Push up or aside any wayward wiring bundles and reach your fingers (or a plastic pry tool) up and around the two sky-facing tabs. Pull carefully down to open the door
Warning: Be careful of the metal frame! It’s sharp!
Remove Old Filter
There it is! Just reach in, pull out the old air filter, and note the direction of the airflow arrow
Ta Da!
Place New Filter
Compared to the Motorcraft filter, the Purolator is much stiffer. Just position and slide it in
All Steps in Reverse
Close the filter door and press until you hear/feel the click on both sides
Pull the glove compartment back up into position until the side tabs click into place
Replace the stop arm on the side of the compartment by just giving it a nice push
PositionPUSH!Boom!
Put your stuff back in
All done!
YOU DID IT! Super easy, AND you saved yourself some money!
Making deli meat at home by combining different cuts of meat (can be same kind of meat or a mixture) with and without a Ham Maker
Why
Ability to control what’s put inside your own cold cuts, and can be cheaper
Time and Effort
Time: A few hours
Effort: Easy
Ingredients
Meat
Seasonings
Supplies
Mixing Bowls
Cutting Board
Knives/Meat Grinder/Processor
Ham Maker
Plastic Wrap/Sausage Wrapping
Foil
Pot/Rice Cooker/Oven
Ham Maker Method
Using a Ham Maker is really the easiest way to make a formed meat, especially if you want to mix several cuts or meats together. It can also be used without mixing meats or grinding them. Ham Makers make the wrapping step a cinch.
Ham Maker
Ingredients and Supplies
Meat, Seasonings, Water, Ham Maker, Cooking Bag, Tall Pot, Pot Thermometer, Stove, Refrigerator
Time
30 minutes Prep + 2 hours Cook + overnight Chill
Process
Wash your Ham Maker if you haven’t
Fill a tall pot with Water, and heat it up on the stove (Target: 182-195F)
Choose your meat:
Whole Meat – an entire piece of meat, uncut (e.g. pork loin, pork shoulder, whole breast)
Mixed Meat – a formed mash of different cuts or combinations of meat types
Prepare your selection by removing veins, bones, and sinews. Decide if you want to keep, and how much, any fat
If using a meat mixture, chop, mince, grind, process, or any combination as desired
Season your choice of meat, to taste
Allow to set for a few minutes
In the meantime, line the Ham Maker with a Cooking Bag
When ready, place meat into the canister
Twist the top of the bag closed
Close the Ham Maker with the press and lid, then insert the thermometer
When water in the pot reaches between 180 – 195F, place the full Ham Maker in the water, making sure the water level sits above the fill line of the meat inside
Keep the temperature steady (I set my gas stove low-medium)
Cook until internal temperature reaches the safe cooking temperature for your meat choice, about 2 hours
Place the hot Ham Maker on a hot pad in the refrigerator and cool overnight
When fully cooled, run canister under warm water to release the meat
Slice and Enjoy!
Pictures!!
Chopped, Minced, and Processed
Removing Air Bubbles
Squish
It’s Hot!
Chilling
Opening
Pour out the juice
Release
Still in Bag
There it is!
Ta-DAAA!! The hole is where both the twist top of the plastic and the thermometer when in. You can see the texture differences from the different cuts/processing of the meat. Delicious!
No Ham Maker Methods
Sous Vide and Smoked are two methods of making this. If you don’t have a sous vide device, there are alternatives
Sous Vide Method
There are different ways to sous vide without actually using a sous vide device. You can use an oven, a Dutch oven or a pot, and even a rice cooker.
Remove any veins, sinews, and bones. Remove or use fat as desired
Choose your meat:
Whole Meat – an entire piece of meat, uncut (e.g. pork loin, pork shoulder, whole breast)
Mixed Meat – a formed mash of different cuts or combinations of meat types
If using Mixed Meat, prepare a [diced: minced: ground] meat ratio of [¾ : ½ : ⅓ lb] or [350 : 250 : 150 g]
Season the meat, to taste (If desired,season each texture a bit differently for a combined complex flavor)
Wrap
Set out a double layer of plastic wrap and sprinkle half with smoked paprika and whatever else you’d like
Turn out meat mixture
Tightly roll into desired shape and size
NOTE: Make sure wrapped meat log(s) will fit into your cooking implement so it can be covered in water!
Secure the ends
Cooking
Here are 3 methods of cooking the meat ham without dedicated Sous Vide equipment
Pot Method
Fill with water
Bring water to a boil
Place meat log into the water (make sure meat is and will be fully submergedthe whole time)
Bring to a boil again
Turn off heat and place lid tightly on top
Leave for 45 minutes to 1 hour
Check for doneness with thermometer
Repeat if necessary
When done, let cool and enjoy, or chill in refrigerator
Oven Method
Preheat oven to 215 – 220F (100C)
Select a deep dish or oven safe pot
Boil enough water to fill
Pour in boiling water
Place meat log
Cover with parchment paper
Cover that in foil and/or a tight lid
Cook for 1-3 hours until 160F (75C)
Remove from oven
Place in an ice bath and/or refrigerator until internal temperature is 50F (10C)
Rice Cooker Method
Boil water
Pour boiled water into rice cooker
Using a thermometer, mix in cold water until water temperature is somewhere between 175-195F
Place meat log into water
Close
Set rice cooker to Keep Warm
Cook for about 2 hours
Be sure temperature is safe for choice of meat
Let cool then enjoy or chill in refrigerator
Pictures (Oven Method)
GroundCubedDicedFlavoringseasoningCombineLet sitRolling…Yeah it doesn’t fit well. Pouring in the boiling waterWax paperFoil and in the ovenIce bath
Ta Da!! Taste was ON POINT
Smoker Method
This method uses a meat grinder then a meat smoker. You can use a dedicated meat grinder, a meat grinding attachment for a stand mixer, or even just a food processor
Prepare Meat
Decide on ratio of meat cuts (e.g. [½ : ½] ratio of [skinned chicken thigh : skinless chicken breast])
Cut into small pieces
Grind/Process
Grind/Process 1st time
Grind/Process 2nd time
Add any desired seasonings and half of total water
NOTE: For 1lb of meat, add 20ml (⅔ oz. or 1⅓ Tbsp) of water
Total ratio is 40mL water per 1lb (40mL = 1⅓ oz = 2¾ Tbsp)
Grind/Process 3rd time
Wrap
Place ground meat in a mixing bowl
Add the rest of the water, and then mix together really well (should be very sticky)
Pump or stuff into an edible or inedible casing (100mm is the largest size I could find on Amazon)
Set smoker to 120F (50C), NO smoke, NO humidity, OPEN dampers to dry the casing for 1 hour
Set to 130F (55C), ADD smoke, ADD humidity (water pan), ¾ damper for 1 hour
145F (65C) for 1 hour
160F (72F) for 1 hour
175F (75C) until internal temperature reaches 160F (72C)
Place in an ice bath to separate the casing and the meat
Slice and enjoy!
Notes
Attempt 4/14/24: Used Oven Sous Vide Method. Should have added something like cornstarch in the meat mixture to give it some adherence. That and/or changing the ratio to add more ground/pureed meat to fill in the gaps in the meat, while taking away from the original cubed meat. Even if cubing (altered the recipe directions to use smaller pieces), then should process a little. 3 degrees of food processor chopping to make the final product smoother would be more ideal. The way this ended up was more of a headcheese. There IS an obvious complex texture, but it all fell apart easily. The 3 different flavor profiles gave it GREAT taste. Made the mistake of not thinking about the cooking vessel until after rolling the meat. Should have cut it in half and then would have been able to have 2 smaller hams and able to cook it inside of the Dutch oven with the water filled to the top. The way I had it, the water didn’t even cover the whole meat log, so cooking was very uneven. Unsure of how to test internal temperature of meat log without making a mess. Cooking @ 215F took about 2.5 to 3 hours total. Used way too much plastic wrap and wasn’t able to use a lidded dish, just 2 layers of foil. Meat used: Chicken. 3 thighs, 1.5 breast, ¼lb ground chicken (hand squeezed to pulverize). NEXT TIME: more ground chicken, less cubed breast. Add cornstarch for smoothness and adherence. Smaller logs for more even cooking. More food processing. Maybe try using meat casing.
7/21/2025: Used Ham Maker
Sous Vide cooking charts recommend cooking chicken at 150F for 1-3 hours.
A Ham Maker is a MUCH easier method of doing this. It’s a metal contraption with a spring in it that fits right into a stock pot on the stove and does the same thing neatly. However, if you don’t have one and don’t want one, this is fine, too.
There’s always the option of baking or broiling it after the fact for a possible crust or rind? Haven’t attempted that yet