The fat content is a ruse, to divert attention from the possibility of users getting cancer, from using their product for bacon, when the USDA states "Nitrate is not allowed" when making bacon.... A slight-of-hand deal.... IMO....
Lol...imagine morton mentioning the C word in their warnings....it would be like a meat packer putting cholesterol warning on their pork butts.The fat content is a ruse, to divert attention from the possibility of users getting cancer, from using their product for bacon, when the USDA states "Nitrate is not allowed" when making bacon.... A slight-of-hand deal.... IMO....
Please cite the article where you found the "600 degrees" to form nitrosamines..
I understand the inhibitors work by reducing the nitrite level. If you add the inhibitor when you start curing how do you know you will have enoug nitrite? Or is the inhibitor added when the meat is cured?That was an outstanding read Wade! Thank you for posting that. I feel a lot smarter now knowing the back story.
I am going to draw a couple of conclusions or take-aways from what I now know.
- I wont be using Tenderquick any longer for curing bacon because it has some cure #2 (Nitrate) in it. Don't need it anyway.
- I will continue to use Martins Nitrate-less tenderquick substitute I posted (post #44)
- I am likely going to start adding a nitrosamine inhibitor to this dry cure such as Sodium Erythorbate or Ascorbate as suggested by the USDA.
- Use of a nitrosamine inhibitor in a WET brine could be prohibitive.. however injection "Pumping" is looking more viable for me now.
pg 236 Marianski's book 600 deg., but Wade got the gov article from I'd go by that.
This is wearing me out, think Ill go cook some Bacon.
BTW does anyone have a dry cure for bacon without sugar just dextrose ?
i don't see bacon on the list...Sugars are used to cut the bitterness of the salt.. I add 1% sugar to my bacon... So, if you eat 100 grams of bacon for breakfast, (~1/5 #), you are getting ~1 grams of sugar... Plus what's in the meat naturally...
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i don't see bacon on the list...