Pork belly bacon too salty?

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mackenziejk

Newbie
Original poster
Jul 27, 2021
8
1
Hi iam smoking a pork belly bacon it sat in cure I looked online used a recipe from a local sausage maker. But look at it in the smoker is this normal or will be too salty based on the picture it looks like the salt is coming through I did rinse in cold water
IMG_2709.jpeg
 
Rinsing is really unnecessary with an equilibrium brine. You can do a fry test before you smoke the bacon, and if you find it too salty, you can soak it in water to draw some salt out.

Try a dry cure with:
.25% cure#1
1.5% salt
.75% sugar

I'm not much of a salt guy, and this is how I cure mine. Not overly salty at all. The salt and sugar are pretty balanced.
 
View attachment 715499
This what I used i am more concerned about all the salt specs on it brined for 4-5 day
I’m not sure if those crystals are salt or sugar. Usually salt will be pure white. That said, the mix is very heavy in salt, what’s called a gradient brine. That’s just the way it was done back in the day so the mixes and recipes sometimes don’t change. In those days with harsh gradient brines, the cure master had to know the time in brine for each piece of meat, and then there was always a equalization time out of brine or a rest period. That last step is left out in modern recipes. You should always fry test these types of cures first, then fresh water soak if needed.

There are much better methods today to cure meats. We practice those here on this site, I’m not sure about on the internet though.
 
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i'm looking at the ingredients and sodium erythorbate and sodium phosphate are better in an injection than a wet brine.
The erythorbate is gone but the phosphates, salt and sugars will come back to the surface as the belly loses moisture and the fats render down.
As Eric SmokinEdge SmokinEdge noted it is a very salt forward blend which is typical of Canadian blends
I'm unfamiliar with F.S. Cure... Can somebody educate me ??
It’s a curing salt similar to cure #1 but contains 5% sodium nitrite where cure #1 contains 6.25% sodium nitrite.
If FS at 5% nitrite cure alone was used it would be a nice cure and salt blend by my usage.
Most belly loses about 40% weight to fat rendering in hot smoking.
 
i'm looking at the ingredients and sodium erythorbate and sodium phosphate are better in an injection than a wet brine.
The erythorbate is gone but the phosphates, salt and sugars will come back to the surface as the belly loses moisture and the fats render down.
As Eric SmokinEdge SmokinEdge noted it is a very salt forward blend which is typical of Canadian blends


If FS at 5% nitrite cure alone was used it would be a nice cure and salt blend by my usage.
Most belly loses about 40% weight to fat rendering in hot smoking.
That cure mix instructions has you put in a nitrite concentration of close to 1970ppm nitrite (no miss type) the USDA lists that concentration in brine. However I bet most would spin their heads to realize that.
 
That cure mix instructions has you put in a nitrite concentration of close to 1970ppm nitrite (no miss type) the USDA lists that concentration in brine. However I bet most would spin their heads to realize that.
It’s Canadian
 
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