DanMcG wrote:As stated by the USDA, HTH's
Note: As stated in the regulations, phosphates are limited to "5% in a pickle at a 10% pump
level", "0.5% in the finished product", "0.5% in the product", and "0.5% of the total product".
As illustrated in Table I, pages 7 through 10, these limits are equivalent to 5000 ppm.
I can copy and paste the pages mentioned if you'd like.
grisell wrote:...That was the information I needed. That amounts to five grams per kilo, then. Yes, I'd like a link to source please, if you have it. Do you know if it gives any funny taste to the finished product?
Once again, thanks.
Marianski wrote:...In other words, the combined action of salt and phosphates is greater than the combined efforts of salt and phosphates if used individually. Around 0.3% phosphate is a typical dose. The maximum allowed is 0.5% but note that they are quite bitter and adding more than 0.3% may affect the product's flavor...Home Production of Quality Meats and Sausage, p. 13.
grisell wrote:Another question: Will phosphate be of any beneficial use in coarser fresh sausages that don't depend so much on a perfect emulsion (chorizo for instance)?
grisell wrote:Another question: Will phosphate be of any beneficial use in coarser fresh sausages that don't depend so much on a perfect emulsion (chorizo for instance)?
vagreys wrote:my personal philosophy is why add unnecessary chemicals to foods that shine best when they are treated simply and not masked? Curing salts I embrace as a matter of common sense food safety. Other additives leave me less convinced. Just my 2 cents.
First, there is evidence that phosphate in the diet is above the optimal level and has been increasing in the last 20-30 years, as it has become more widely used in many types of processed foods.
This agrees with the findings of FDA researchers Calvo and Park ("Changing phosphorus content of the U.S. Diet: Potential for adverse effects on bone." Journal of Nutrition 126:1168S-1180S, 1996).
The latter published a study that revealed that dietary phosphorus levels have increased enough to potentially contribute to osteoporosis.
In particular, the ratio of calcium to phosphorus in the diet has declined. Phosphate additives are used in buffer solutions, emulsifiers, stabilizers, thickeners, and antioxidants.
They are also used in the meat industry, cheese spreads, soups, sauces, creams and chocolates. Phosphate as an additive can be found as a flour improver, a flow conditioner in bulk goods, an aerator and as a component of modified starch.
Hafer reports that Feldheim calculated an intake of 1570 mg per day as contrasted with a recommended level of 750 mg.
Hafer describes a number of experiments with a low phosphate diet.
For instance, a psychiatrist - Dr. Roy-Feiler - found a low phosphate diet to be helpful in treating ADD in the clinical setting.
Fifteen children with ADD, whose symptoms had been under control for several months with the low phosphate diet, were tested in a double blind manner.
Capsules containing a 6.9 pH buffer solution of 75 mg PO4 (a very physiological form of phosphate) were used in the test and the children reacted quite violently to the phosphate, with reoccurrences of their previous symptoms that lasted for days.
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