Here is maybe a dumb question is one smarter to inject the brine as well as brining pork bellies in a wet brine and will this cut down the brining time any thoughts on this would be appreciated
Thank you, atomicsmoke. Yes, I have tried wet-curing bacon before then hot smoking it. I have seen dry curing videos and it seems more practical and "bacony thing". I prefer wet-curing my hams and dry curing my bacon. I have just finished applying my cure rub on my meat and set it on my fridge. probably gonna take it out next Thursday and dry it out for 2 days in the fridge before smoking it. I'm not sure about cold smoking because I have read somewhere here that cold-smoking can be dangerous because it will sit on the 'danger zone' while on the grill. anyway, I might try it out next week. Thanks!Jeronuz,
The recipe in the link is the standard dry cure: 0.25% of cure#1. You can change the salt a little according to your taste.
You probably know that you can wet cure the meat for bacon as well. Look up pop's brine here.
I prefer dry cured cold smoked bacon but you might like one of the other methods.
What is meat that you plan to take out next Thursday? Belly?
Cold smoking is safe even in warmer temperatures if the meat is cured properly.
If you just finish applying the cure and plan to take it out next Thu only gives one week of curing time. I recommend at least 10 days, 2 weeks would be perfect.
Different rules apply regarding the Danger Zone once you have applied a cure to the meat - as the curing process acts as a bacterial inhibitor. When curing bacon you are doing the following things:
Thank you, atomicsmoke. Yes, I have tried wet-curing bacon before then hot smoking it. I have seen dry curing videos and it seems more practical and "bacony thing". I prefer wet-curing my hams and dry curing my bacon. I have just finished applying my cure rub on my meat and set it on my fridge. probably gonna take it out next Thursday and dry it out for 2 days in the fridge before smoking it. I'm not sure about cold smoking because I have read somewhere here that cold-smoking can be dangerous because it will sit on the 'danger zone' while on the grill. anyway, I might try it out next week. Thanks!
If you have calculated your salt sugar and cure properly why would you want to add more at this point. Without a taste test you will have no idea how it tastes. I would not be adding at this point especially salt. When you reach the full cure point taste it and then add what you think it needs in the rest priod before you smoke it
There could be a several of reasons for the lack of liquidThanks! About my cure... is it normal that no water/bacon_juice is coming out from the meat? I have seen instructional videos on dry curing and there seems to be a noteable amount of liquid in their cure bags after some time. Mine is just moist due to salination but no water. Does that mean I made a mistake?
There could be a several of reasons for the lack of liquid
Firstly it will depend on the meat and how it has been handled/treated before you received it. With fresh pork that I get straight from the butcher there is usually very little liquid produced however when I have cured some supermarket pork or pork that has been previously frozen it can sometimes produce a lot.
Your packaging will also have an effect. If you are curing in a loosely sealed bag then you often get more visible brine produced. If you vac pack your meat while it is curing you will usually see very little
If you are curing it uncovered (like Dave Omak) then the water could be evaporating from the surface as it is being produced
If you are curing it in loose wrapping like clingfilm or Saran wrap then it could be being lost through leakage.
Providing the dry brining is done in a sealed package preventing the liquid from being lost then you are fine - you will get variation in the amount of liquid produced. Dave's method I have not tried but he uses it regularly and has posted that it works fine. Losing the brine through leakage is obviously not good.
I usually vac pack mine and I end up with a piece of damp looking bacon when it is opened as much of the liquid produced is reabsorbed by the meat (similar to what you described). I can be curing 3 or 4 different pieces of pork at the same time and can get differing amounts of liquid produced in each pack.