I COMPLETELY understand there's not just "one" way to do everything, but some of the instructions I've been running across online/videos SEEMS to fly DIRECTLY in the face of what I learned when I first got into curing/smoking meat.
Example, when looking for info on curing ham a couple of weeks ago, I found a LOT of quite prominent YT cook/chefs/bbq'ers that will tell you to add ALL the ingredients to a brine, INCLUDING the curing salts, and THEN bring to a boil, but what "I" was taught was to add the curing salts AFTER boiling and AFTER the brine has cooled because the high heat can essentially destroy the cure.
Another example are curing TIMES. I've used Pop's brine quite a bit and, IIRC, the cure penetrates about 1/2" a day from both sides...ex, a 4" thick piece of meat would need 8 days to cure and then a couple of days extra just to be safe and that you should always inject part of the brine if the meat is thicker than 4". What I'm reading recently is to go by the WEIGHT of the meat and not the thickness of the meat, but that would demand that all meats have the same density/weight/texture/water&fat content, etc...I'm no expert, but I just cannot accept that as accurate.
In any event, almost all of what I've learned has been from this forum and as I'm still alive and kicking
, I'm going to stick to what I KNOW has been safe in my experience.
As you were...
Example, when looking for info on curing ham a couple of weeks ago, I found a LOT of quite prominent YT cook/chefs/bbq'ers that will tell you to add ALL the ingredients to a brine, INCLUDING the curing salts, and THEN bring to a boil, but what "I" was taught was to add the curing salts AFTER boiling and AFTER the brine has cooled because the high heat can essentially destroy the cure.
Another example are curing TIMES. I've used Pop's brine quite a bit and, IIRC, the cure penetrates about 1/2" a day from both sides...ex, a 4" thick piece of meat would need 8 days to cure and then a couple of days extra just to be safe and that you should always inject part of the brine if the meat is thicker than 4". What I'm reading recently is to go by the WEIGHT of the meat and not the thickness of the meat, but that would demand that all meats have the same density/weight/texture/water&fat content, etc...I'm no expert, but I just cannot accept that as accurate.
In any event, almost all of what I've learned has been from this forum and as I'm still alive and kicking
As you were...
Last edited:
