Smokin in Korea wrote:I am contemplating making a bone in leg Ham with either a wet brine or dry cure with a Maple Sugar cure ...
I have heard the term 10 or 20% pump
Does this mean I inject 10 to 20% of the total volume of the Brine into the leg. (Depending on leg weight also)
I've never injected a ham - so this is theoretical!
Imagine you have a 10kg ham. For "10%" pump" you'd inject 1kg of curing brine. For 20% 2kg.
It relates the amount injected to the starting meat weight.
For simple immersion curing, you might expect that the meat might take up 10% of its own weight from the brine. To get more weight of water in there you have to inject it. And (I suspect) use phosphates or such to get it to stay rather than dripping out.
Maybe that's the function of the Glycol? (That's antifreeze!)
Injecting gets the cure in place fast. Immersion curing of thick bone-in hams risks spoilage next to the bone before the cure can penetrate that far.
With injecting, the curing time is dramatically reduced, because with lots of injection points the cure has only short distances to diffuse.
i'm surprised there's no Ascorbate/Vitamin C as a cure accelerator. Without that, you'd be relying on the natural bacterial breakdown of the Nitrite to get the pinking and hamminess. Having some of the sugar as Dextrose is something I have taken as a sign of 'feeding the bacteria', rather than being just for sweetening.
There are links on site to the meat inspectors calculation handbook, which sets out many calculations - but do carefully check the assumptions against your plans - and beware that when they say "10% pump" (or somesuch) in their calculations you *must* use the *proportion* 0.1 and NOT the percentage 10
However the Nitrite section should be helpful to you, setting out their limits.
You can calculate the amount of Nitrite that you pump in. You cannot calculate the amount that might drip out. (This matters if you go beyond 8 or 10% without phosphate or the like).
Calculation for injection followed by immersion is NOT covered in the handbook.
I rather like the suggestions of Jane Grigson in her "Charcuterie" for some hams - firstly of boning out the femur while leaving the hock as a handle - making curing and carving less problematic. And also of hanging the (part-boned) ham for a day or two, hock uppermost, (and even beating it occasionally or squeezing it) to try and drain everything possible out of the ham before starting the cure. (She uses rubbing and immersion, but injecting was not in the repertoire of the French provincial butchers whose techniques she recorded.)