by Salmo » Wed Dec 12, 2012 4:01 pm
A novice here-just thinking in print!
Presumably any excess Nitrite,that is more than the meat can reduce to Nitric oxide,will remain in the meat as Nitrite & ,again presumably, this excess Nitrite is what gives rise to health concerns?
One of the unknowns is how much Sodium Nitrite migrates out of the meat during the cooking process.
Sodium Nitrite is (of course) soluble in water,just like table salt (Sodium Chloride).
We know that the cooking water will become salty from Sodium Chloride migrating into it during cooking, so it seems logical to assume that excess Nitrite will do the same.
Trouble is without some sophisticated gadgets it's impossible to know.
Perhaps somebody has access to a gas chromatography machine and could check their cooking liquor after cooking,just to see how much Nitrite it contains.
Seems a lot of aggro though
Give a man a fish,and you feed him for a day.
Teach a man to fish,and you won't see him again for the rest of the season.