Do we have a link to Oddleys 2-1 brine please'
This is most interesting.
Cheers.
Titch
captain wassname wrote:sorry Phil been struggling with my reply
Jim
Jogeephus
I'm beginning to see where I'm confused. Good thing is there is more than one way to skin a cat. EdwinT, I made up a 70% brine the Wednesday for some pigs that were butchered yesterday and I'll find my notes and post the amounts if you wish.
I use a salinometer for all brine work and find it priceless. Once it reminded me to add salt to the brine.
Phil
With whatever brining method we choose we have no sure way of knowing how much nitrite has gone into the meat. The beauty of the 2:1 system is that there's far less nitrite to start with to cause problems.
As an example of this safety, take the last cure I did (A cider cure). If every scrap of nitrite and nitrate had entered the meat, leaving none whatsoever remaining in the brine, it would still have been below 300PPM. Looking back on some of the older style cures (% nitrite in brine/% pick up) this figure would be 6 times greater.
Please feel free to use whatever ratio is convenient for you, but you will need to reformulate any recipes that have been designed for a 2:1 ratio.
HTH
Phil
EdwinT wrote:...This is a very common arrangement for domestic fridges. So I thought of using it to cure hams. I think the salad tray would hold around 20 to 30 litres when full (I must measure it). This would suggest to me that I could use the brine it will contain to cure multiple hams starting each new ham with a 3 or 4 day interval between each of them.
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