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Corned beef question (well, corned goose actually)
Posted:
Sun Dec 04, 2011 6:59 pm
by Johnh57
I've done corned goose a couple of times, once using len poli's recipe for carni salada that turned out quite good. I'm inclined to try a version of Oddley's corned beef recipe. A typical goose breast might weigh in at about 1 kilo, or slightly less. I would plan to do about 6 breasts at a time.
Oddleys recipe calls for both cure #1 and saltpeter. I'd like to not use the saltpeter and use cure #2 instead (i'm in the states, saltpeter is discouraged.) Rough calculations for 1 kilo of meat and a 4% nitrate content of instacure #2 would yield too high a concentration of nitrite.
If I've done my sums correctly, for 1 kg of meat, I'd need 2.81 gms of cure #1 and 0.33 gm of saltpeter. Using 4% nitrate conc. Cure #2, to get 0.33 gm of nitrate using cure #2, I'd need 8.27 gms of cure #2. That would yield 0.558 gms of nitrite, which is about 3 times as much nitrite as the recipe calls for.
Is this a problem? Can I get there from here? I also have access to tenderquick if that would be a better solution.
Edit to add to the confusion: I've seen where insta-cure #2 is 4% sodium nitrate, and I've also seen it advertised as 1% sodium nitrate. I can't say for sure what I have, the supplier (allied kenco) I purchased it from doesn't give that information.
John
Posted:
Sun Dec 04, 2011 8:26 pm
by wheels
Unless you plan on leaving them for a long period without refrigeration I don't see any reason why you can't just leave out the saltpetre and just use cure #1.
HTH
Phil
Re: Corned beef question (well, corned goose actually)
Posted:
Sun Dec 04, 2011 8:51 pm
by SausageBoy
Johnh57 wrote:I've done corned goose a couple of times, once using len poli's recipe for carni salada that turned out quite good. I'm inclined to try a version of Oddley's corned beef recipe. A typical goose breast might weigh in at about 1 kilo, or slightly less. I would plan to do about 6 breasts at a time.
Oddleys recipe calls for both cure #1 and saltpeter. I'd like to not use the saltpeter and use cure #2 instead (i'm in the states, saltpeter is discouraged.) Rough calculations for 1 kilo of meat and a 4% nitrate content of instacure #2 would yield too high a concentration of nitrite.
If I've done my sums correctly, for 1 kg of meat, I'd need 2.81 gms of cure #1 and 0.33 gm of saltpeter. Using 4% nitrate conc. Cure #2, to get 0.33 gm of nitrate using cure #2, I'd need 8.27 gms of cure #2. That would yield 0.558 gms of nitrite, which is about 3 times as much nitrite as the recipe calls for.
Is this a problem? Can I get there from here? I also have access to tenderquick if that would be a better solution.
Edit to add to the confusion: I've seen where insta-cure #2 is 4% sodium nitrate, and I've also seen it advertised as 1% sodium nitrate. I can't say for sure what I have, the supplier (allied kenco) I purchased it from doesn't give that information.
John
Leave out the nitrate or use the Tender Quik.
FWIW, Here's my recipe for a (nitrite only) Tender Quick replacement.
It's used the same as Tender Quick. One
level tablespoon per pound of muscle meat or 1/2 a
level tablespoon per pound of ground meat.
"Super Easy Dry Cure Mix
My cure recipe is inspired by Morton’s Tenderquick (but with nitrite
only) so that the cure is super easy to use……for dry curing…use one
tablespoon per pound of meat…for curing ground meats such as
sausage…use 1/2 tablespoon per pound of meat…it provides the cure and
the salt for the recipe…..no additional salt is needed."
17.5 oz salt
5.0 oz sugar
2.0 oz cure #1
SausageBoy
Posted:
Sun Dec 04, 2011 9:56 pm
by Johnh57
I am not planning on leaving it un-refrigerated for any length of time. Oddly's recipe called for a 10 day soak, most of the instacure #1 recipes I see indicate a 3-4 day cure. I was/am concerned about cure times.
If I use TQ, which is indicated as 0.5% nitrite and 0.5% nitrate and match Oddly's nitrate concentration, then the nitrite concentration is still a bit high, and the salt concentration is roughly 2x Oddly's recipe. Using 66.15 gms of TQ, would yield .33 gm of nitrate, .33 gms of nitrite, 1.32 gms of sugar, and 64.17 gms of salt. By comparison, Oddly' recipe calls for .33 gm of nitrate, 0.176 gm of nitrate (assuming 6.25 % concentration #1 cure), and 35.7 gms of salt (including the salt added and the 93.75% salt content of the #1 cure)
john
Posted:
Sun Dec 04, 2011 11:34 pm
by wheels
Seems to me that this is complicating things. Just use cure #1 and leave the saltpetre out.
Phil
Posted:
Mon Dec 05, 2011 12:30 am
by Johnh57
Thanks Wheels - do I / can I / should I stick with the 10 day cure? - refrigerated of course.
Posted:
Mon Dec 05, 2011 3:59 pm
by wheels
It's purely a personal opinion, but I'd do everything as per the recipe but just omit the saltpetre. It could be argued that the timescale for the recipe is based on the saltpetre taking a longer time to work, but I'd still go with it.
HTH
Phil
Posted:
Mon Dec 05, 2011 4:03 pm
by Johnh57
Thanks Wheels - Todays project I think, have several breasts in the refrig I need to do something with!