Monty House
TVWBB Pro
Not sure why this happened. This piece was not crushed by something either. The rest of the belly piece looks like what I've always gotten before after curing. Anyone seen this before?
Interesting. I'm using the Ruhlman cure recipe (including pink salt). They seem firm to the touch, too.The bright areas occur only when you use pink salt or something similar. I've never seen them if you are using only regular salt.
Nitrite burn (excess nitrite) is usually olive green in color, it's something entirely different.
The bright areas seen above are where the meat hasn't oxidized yet because it's touching the bag in that spot, etc.
Again, it's nothing to worry about.
~Martin
How much bacon do you intend to cure with that mix?
That's enough pink salt for 70+ lbs. of bacon.
~Martin
I had three full bellies which, in the box, weighed 45#. I used that much because it was easy to use the 2:1 cups salt:sugar ratio. I knew it was way more than I needed.
Yep, about 242 ppm nitrite, way more than the recommended maximum safe level.
The USDA limits nitrite to 120 ppm in commercial bacon, most home bacon curers use the standard rule-of-thumb, one level teaspoon of cure #1 (6.25% nitrite pink salt) to 5 lbs. of meat, which equates to 156 ppm nitrite.
~Martin
The amounts I listed above (i.e., 2 cups salt, 1 cup sugar, 5.33 tbsp Cure #1) were applied as follows: 1/4 cup from that mixture added to 1/2 cup brown sugar per every 5 lbs of pork belly. Would that presumably lower your 242 ppm calculation, Martin? Thank you.
I backed into the meat quantity that would equal 630 gm of salt. After doing so, the calculator showed 356 gm of sugar required for a 1% value and 89 gm of Cure #1. Since I had only used 213 gm of sugar, I accordingly decreased the desired sugar level down to .5966% which equaled 213 gm. However, when I did so, the Cure #1 amount remained constant at 89 gm.Here are the results from the calculator for 45 lbs. (20411.55 grams) of bacon, 156ppm nitrite, 2% salt and 1% sugar.
50.95 grams of cure #1.
What did you enter into the calculator?
~Martin
I backed into the meat quantity that would equal 630 gm of salt. After doing so, the calculator showed 356 gm of sugar required for a 1% value and 89 gm of Cure #1. Since I had only used 213 gm of sugar, I accordingly decreased the desired sugar level down to .5966% which equaled 213 gm. However, when I did so, the Cure #1 amount remained constant at 89 gm.
I wanted to reiterate that I only used approx. 1/2 of the initial 3+ cup salt/sugar/Cure mixture for what ended up being I believe between 25-30 lbs of pork belly. Each 2 gallon bag held two 2.5 lb. hunks; I used 1/4 cup of the mixture and 1/2 cup brown sugar for each 2 gallon bag containing approx. 5 lbs. of meat. I had six 2 gallon bags with meat, or close to 30 lbs.
Thanks again for your help.