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Thanks, appreciate all the help.
I bought the following scale, looks like it's good enough for the job. If anyone recommends a different one, I'll check it out.
https://www.amazon.com/Weigh-Gram-Digital-Jewelry-Kitchen/dp/B06Y61YW7S/
Makes sense, USDA probably erring on the side of extreme safety. I wonder how far you could push the ppm of nitrite before it became a problem...
I currently have my tri-trip in the fridge, it only weighs 1037g. Is it best I still wait the 14 days before smoking and steaming or can I take it...
Interesting. Just so we're on the same page. Let's say I used .39% Cure#1 which comes out to 241ppm. You're saying after curing for 14 days, cooking, that I have absolutely nothing to worry about because practically all the nitrites will be gone? Then why is the recommended limit of Nitrite 200ppm?
Appreciate the responses from everyone, I went with 3g.
Just to ask, what if my scale wasn't accurate and it was accidentally 4g. Would that be a start over situation? I believe that would be 241ppm.
I have a piece of tri tip weighing 1037g. I'm thinking of doing the following dry cure: 2% salt, 2% sugar, and .25% Cure#1. The only problem is the Cure#1 comes out to 2.59g. My scale isn't that accurate, should I just go down to 2g or up 3g? Or I could buy a gram scale...
I don't want to misquote SmokinEdge, please correct me if I do. It seemed like he was saying a cover brine is not predictable because at some random point the uptake of salt + cure#1 will stop. It could be 8%, 10%, or 14% but at some random point it will happen and your meat will be not properly...
Alright, well last question for you guys if you're not too tired of them. When using a dry cure is it safe to put the meat with the cure in a vacuum sealed bag and let it sit for 14-15 days sealed in the fridge?
If I was to try what seems the most comfortable it would definitely be the dry cure/dry brine method. It makes the most intuitive, practical, and technical sense. I understand you never said cover brines don't work, but in my mind if someone says something is random that's more or less the same...
Appreciate the thorough reply, everything you wrote makes technical sense. Practically though, what I keep seeing over and over seems to indicate cover brines do work very well and unless my own eyes are wrong(very possible), it seems like a piece of meat in a cover brine will at some point take...
Thanks! This leads me back to my previous question, I thought a cover brine where the water is factored with the weight of the meat would be considered what people refer to on here as the equalization method? But you seem to implying that the only true equalization method is either dry rubbing...
I appreciate the information!
I guess my question is, I thought a cover brine where the water is factored with the weight of the meat would be considered what people refer to on here as the equalization method? But you seem to implying that the only true equalization method is either dry...
Recipe #2 was injected and in the cover brine for 4-5 days, also salt plus sugar were at 4% weight of meat plus water. Would that make it unsafe at some point compared to recipe #1? I guess I'm trying to understand the important distinctions between both methods, because the results in recipe #2...
Appreciate the responses, but I was wondering about about the differences that could happen from recipe (1) which uses .25% cure 1 and recipe (2) which uses .50% cure 1...
Hi Everyone,
First time posting, and I was hoping to get a clear answer on the best percentage of pink salt to use when curing for pastrami. I thought I'd post what I've seen as reference and if anyone would be up for it to go through exactly the variation I think I'm seeing and what's ok or...