A few additional questions:
1. Do you always have to use the recommended salt + sugar when using cure #1 for the dry rub?
2. Even when making snack sticks I have dissolved the cure #1 with a store bought mix (Willie's Snack Stick for example) I have not included salt + sugar.
Is the salt and sugar a requirement when using cure #1?
Thanks all.
When you buy an off the shelf mix like the Willie's Snack Sticks, the seasoning is mostly salt and sugar along with their other seasonings for flavor so as SmokingEdge stated there is no need to add any salt and sugar with the store bought seasoning THOUGH you do need to add cure#1 to it... which they often provide in a separate baggy within the seasoning package.
When you make your own cure and seasoning you MUST use salt for sure. Sugar helps but seems to be optional. Salt is the magic component that wants to really really penetrate and travel equally into everything it is in contact with.
One more tip about store bought seasonings. I often find them to be way too salty and they don't scale well based on their by volume instructions (by volume = teaspoons/tablespoons). So for each store bought seasoning I buy convert to per pound seasoning amounts for 1 pound of meat.
I do this by weighting the amount of seasoning in the pack (yeah I pour it out because the amount on the label is often off) and seeing how much seasoning they claim a whole pack does.
For example a pack of seasoning for 20 pounds of meat may contain 510gms of seasoning.
So 510gm divided by 20 lbs = 42.5gms of seasoning per 1 pound of meat.
I then mix up 42.5gm of seasoning for 1 pound of meat and do the fry test and adjust from there.
I find this way to be very very very good to start with and almost every store bought seasoning does over 2% salt and 1% sugar or so for their seasoning mixes. I prefer about 1.65% salt so more often than not I end up adjusting the per pound weight down to be less salty, BUT there are a few I have adjusted up because sometimes seasonings are just bland.
I have personally seen that this applies to bacon seasonings just as much as sausage seasonings. I've done this with at least 3 LEM's bacon seasoning backs that I either bought or were gifted and used this with at least 5 Lems sausage seasonings, 1 ownes, 2 AC Leggs, and a couple of random Jerky seasonings. My little discovered process for off the store seasonings seems to work super well with all of them to help get close so you can dial it in via the testing process :D
It is horrible to not figure this out and then discover the problem after making like 40 pounds of meat that is too bland or too salty because measurements didn't scale or were just plain stupid to begin with hahahha.
I hope this info helps :D
Good to know, thank you. I love this place!
I'm a huge fan of equilibrium cure, dry or wet. And yeah this site and these people are the best source of this stuff IN THE WORLD!!!!