I started to get into curing/bringing recently and made my first batches of sausage a few weeks back.
I now want to try my hands on wet curing meats-- specifically corned beef and German Eisbein (cured ham hock). My source of nitrite for the curing process is Prague Powder #1 (PP#1) and I did find reasonable recipes that give me a good idea about how much to use.
However, one of the problems I have is that I don't exactly understand how to adjust recipes. While for the sausage recipes, there is only one variable (the amount of meat), in the case of a wet cure there are two (amount of meat and amount of brine).
So, here is the question: The recipes either call for a certain amount of PP#1 per gallon of brine or they call for a certain amount of PP#1 per pound of meat. Yet, I would guess that both the volume of brine and the amount of meat should be considered.
Let's assume for now that at the end of the brining process the curing agent is distributed evenly throughout the meat and the brine, then the final concentration ends up being
[c(brine)*vol(brine)]/[vol(brine)+vol(meat)]
only if the volume of the brine far exceeds the amount of meat should we be able to ignore how much meat is present in the brine.
However, if we just use determine the amount of PP#1 by the amount of meat that's in the brine, obviously, we will run into trouble if the volume of the brine is significantly larger than the volume of the meat.
Is there a site somewhere, that explains exactly how much nitrite should be in a brine (taking into account both the volume of the brine and the meat)?
In addition, I have been skimming through the posts and found some that estimate the amounts of curing salts in the meat at certain intervals of the curing process. Yet, I could not find what assumptions these calculation are based on. Could somebody point me maybe to a site where the assumptions and the calculations are explained.
Thanks a lot.