EdwinT wrote:Surely if I had a 1 kg piece of meat submerged in 0.5 litres of brine, that same piece of meat would absorb the same amount of the brine constituents if it was submerged in 1000 litres of the same brine mix.
Jogeephus wrote:Sorry, I'm confused again. I've always used 2:1 as the weight of the meat to the weight of the brine and the salinity determined the length of curing time. Please explain.
captain wassname
when a piece of pork is immersed in a brine the whole system will eventually reach equilibrium.That is to say that the the brine and the meat will both contain the same percentage of salt (and nitrite/nitrate)
So a kilo of brine with 100 gms salt has 2 kg of meat immersed in it
left for long enough each kilo of the total will contain 1 third of the salt. that is 33gms per kilo or 3.3%
if we have 2kg of brine with 200 gms salt and the same 2 kg joint then at equilibrium each kilo will contain 50 gms salt (200 divided by 4)
In the first instance as we want 2.5 gms of cure#1 in each kilo we would need to add 7.5 gms cure#1 so 1 kilo of brine contains 7.5 gms cure#1
In the second case we would need to add 10 gms cure #1 to the 2 kg brine so only 5 gms cure#1 per kilo of brine.
The reason why 10% salt is because thats what the US authorities require.
I know the figures I have used are not exact (a 10% solution is 90=10 not 100+10) also no allowance for sugar.
But the point of Oddleys 2-1 brine is to ,as explained , minimise the salt while still covering the meat
Jim
The volume doesn't matter as long as you have plenty of room and the meat isn't crowded. The 2:1 gives you a good idea how much brine to make to fully cover the meat so you don't make too much and waste money or too little and not have enough to cover the meat. A 70% brine is going to cure the meat weather you have a gallon or a million gallons. Its simply for planning. Least that's how it works for me.
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