- Sep 15, 2023
- 26
- 7
Hi Everyone,
Long time follower, but rare contributor. I am smoking more now and would like to increase my menu options from just brisket, ribs, pulled pork, cheeks and osobuco, with a couple tries at bacon, to also include more cured meats and sausages.
I have done a couple batches of pork loins and pastramis before, but I would like to reduce the curing time.
I have a few questions that might help me understand things a bit more since there isn't really clear info about some things out there. Hopefully they can help out a few others also. The are:
1) For making Bacon/Canadian Bacon (pork loin) the limit of nitrite for immersion/injection is 120 ppm and for brisket for corned beef or pastrami is 200 ppm.
a) Is this correct?
b) what is the minimum you would make sure it is?
c) When people are using the 0.25% for wet brines (156ppm) is that just an error on not knowing that the recommended limit for immersion/injected bacon is 120ppm?
d) Is there a minimum cure time recommended to make sure there aren't residual nitrite when frying the bacon in the pan?
e) If you will be frying bacon should sodium erythorbate be included in the cure? Does this apply to immersion or or injected only?
2) Online I see people make their brines (with curing salt), and then inject some of it, without really measuring how much was injected, or a ratio of meat to brine solution.
a) What is the proper method?
b) I want to understand how to prepare the injection brine and the cover pickle solution. I have seen different things, i) again people use the same solution, ii) Waltons video on youtube suggest half concentration of the pickle solution, iii) USDA Processing Inspectors' Handbook Version I can find online I think suggests you determine the percent of the maximum limit being injected, and then the balance of remaining percent can be included in the cover pickle (see snip below).
c) The example 1) in the snip below mentioned in b), it says that only 72ppm is allowed in the immersion stage. Is that 72 ppm of the solution, or based on weight of solution + meat?
d) Can you also clarify if you are addressing just the Curing Salt (PP1) or also the kosher salt in the injection and pickle solution. Will it achieve an equilibrium or is a deslination required?
e) When injecting, I have seen some people suggest it is ready in 1-2 days, but on Meathead's website he mentions it just reduces the time based on the calculator by 30%, what do you find? and does letting it sit longer improve it?
I really appreciate any help with this.
USDA Processing Inspectors' Handbook Revision 1995
Long time follower, but rare contributor. I am smoking more now and would like to increase my menu options from just brisket, ribs, pulled pork, cheeks and osobuco, with a couple tries at bacon, to also include more cured meats and sausages.
I have done a couple batches of pork loins and pastramis before, but I would like to reduce the curing time.
I have a few questions that might help me understand things a bit more since there isn't really clear info about some things out there. Hopefully they can help out a few others also. The are:
1) For making Bacon/Canadian Bacon (pork loin) the limit of nitrite for immersion/injection is 120 ppm and for brisket for corned beef or pastrami is 200 ppm.
a) Is this correct?
b) what is the minimum you would make sure it is?
c) When people are using the 0.25% for wet brines (156ppm) is that just an error on not knowing that the recommended limit for immersion/injected bacon is 120ppm?
d) Is there a minimum cure time recommended to make sure there aren't residual nitrite when frying the bacon in the pan?
e) If you will be frying bacon should sodium erythorbate be included in the cure? Does this apply to immersion or or injected only?
2) Online I see people make their brines (with curing salt), and then inject some of it, without really measuring how much was injected, or a ratio of meat to brine solution.
a) What is the proper method?
b) I want to understand how to prepare the injection brine and the cover pickle solution. I have seen different things, i) again people use the same solution, ii) Waltons video on youtube suggest half concentration of the pickle solution, iii) USDA Processing Inspectors' Handbook Version I can find online I think suggests you determine the percent of the maximum limit being injected, and then the balance of remaining percent can be included in the cover pickle (see snip below).
c) The example 1) in the snip below mentioned in b), it says that only 72ppm is allowed in the immersion stage. Is that 72 ppm of the solution, or based on weight of solution + meat?
d) Can you also clarify if you are addressing just the Curing Salt (PP1) or also the kosher salt in the injection and pickle solution. Will it achieve an equilibrium or is a deslination required?
e) When injecting, I have seen some people suggest it is ready in 1-2 days, but on Meathead's website he mentions it just reduces the time based on the calculator by 30%, what do you find? and does letting it sit longer improve it?
I really appreciate any help with this.
USDA Processing Inspectors' Handbook Revision 1995