Hello Portly ! Welcome !
Portly wrote:I have a couple of questions in regards to salt % which I would be grateful if anyone could clarify.
1 In curing salami, is there a minimum amount of salt needed to produce a safe product? I have read a minimum 2.5% is advised on the Len Poli website, but have found most recipes add less than this amount.
Ah, but the salt you *add* is only part of the story.
Not least, you are also going to take away *water*.
Hence the final product is going to have a higher salt proportion than the starting ingredients.
I don't think its helpful to look for an exact boundary between safe and unsafe, let alone for an ingredient such as salt that plays a multiplicity of roles.
As to whether there is an officially recommended minimum final salt proportion (NaCl by weight, as per a recipe) - I don't know !!
But, as such, its going to be an arbitrary level, for commercial products, with a margin for error, rather than marking an exact specific biochemical threshold. And so, it wouldn't surprise me if different authorities were to set different levels, further adding to the confusion!
One means of taking into account all the various things dissolved in the water is the concept of "water activity". For a solid, this is in some ways analagous to the concept of atmospheric relative humidity. (But its not something I have any great understanding of.) In food processing, its a measure of the wetness/dryness of the product. More stuff dissolved makes it behave as though it was dryer. Its a way of putting numbers on this.
Portly wrote:2 When making Air dried products from whole muscles e.g coppa, ham etc, what is the salt to meat ratio? I see that Len Poli states 4.5% salt to meat, but have again found a lot of variety in recipes. I am looking to use the salt/cure as a rub rather than covering it in the cure as I suppose this would more evenly distribute the cure ingredients
When you put solid salt on the outside of a piece of meat, water is taken up by the salt, drying the flesh it is in contact with. The water within the meat would tend to spread evenly, and so will try and restore the hydration of that which the salt has dried. Thus water is 'sucked' out of the meat.
BUT, that water will be tending to dissolve the salt - forming a strong brine. That liquid, in contact with the meat surface will allow the meat to take up some salt (or rather sodium and chloride ions).
How much salt might actually be taken up is going to depend on many factors, like whether the meat is allowed to sit in a puddle of brine.
I know that's not an answer to your second question
as to the amount of salt to use as a rub - but I hope it explains why I think that there is no simple universal answer - at least not outside the context of a specific process recipe.
You will note that Oddley's second quote above indicates that a final salt content of "4.5%" is being advocated. HOWEVER, with salami, we can control and measure what goes in. With whole muscle meats we have no means of measuring what has actually been taken up as a dry cure (apart from our tastebuds).
The "4.5%" indicated by the US Food Safety and Inspection Services is in the context of a final content - and whatever else it means, it is *not* an indication of the amount to apply as a rub. There is a further layer of confusion to be aware ofOddley reports the FSIS wrote:... Strains of C. botulinum that grow in a suitable food containing 7 percent salt are known. ... The growth of these strains, however, is inhibited at a concentration of 10 percent ...
What, exactly does that
"7 percent salt" (or 10 percent) really mean?
And how does it relate to the "salt to meat ratio" that you asked about?
Segner, Schmidt and Bolz wrote:It is usually recognised that about 10% sodium chloride (calculated as per cent brine concentration) is necessary to inhibit growth and toxin production of C Botulinum type A and proteolytic type B. In contrast, type E growth is inhibited by a brine concentration of about 5%. Type C appears to be even less salt-tolerant than type E, its growth being inhibited by 3% salt.
http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/articleren ... tid=376479 see bottom of page 1028
They are talking about
percentages of saturated brine (ie 10% saturated brine + 90% water is plenty) and *not* percentage by weight of solid crystalline salt.
And this in the water inside the meat. Its not referenced to the total weight of meat! Beware!
Follow trusted recipes, and always beware of thinking that you understand what a writer probably means...