Hi
Paul Peacock was an ambassador for a company who sell Supacure/Supracure. No doubt that's why he recommended it.
The recommended usage rate for this product will result in bacon that does NOT comply to either EU or US regulations. I would use Prague #1 for bacon and cooked hams as more recipes are written for this than any other; Prague #2 for air dried products. I would not recommend mixing a batch of either yourself. It's fraught with hidden problems.
The figures he gives for dry cured bacon using cure/Prague #1 are fine:
Per Kg:
Salt 22.5g
Sugar 8g
Cure/Prague #1 - 2.5g
Brine/wet curing is another beast altogether.
Many of use favour an adaption of a method called equilibrium curing; we only add enough salt/cure etc to achieve the level we want when the meat and brine have got to the stage where they have equal levels of salt etc throughout. If we just used the levels per kg of the ingredients above multiplied by the combined meat and water weights, this would achieve this. However, tests carried out by a forum member show that the meat will be 85% towards equilibrium in 10 days per kg but that full equilibrium will take considerably longer - certainly well in excess of 20 days per kg and probably much longer, hence the need for an adaption. In the adapted method, we adjust the levels of the ingredients to achieve the levels we want in 10 days per kg.
To save you having to number crunch everything, you can use this (beta version) calculator. It's the figures on the RH side that you're interested in:
http://www.localfoodheroes.co.uk/calcul ... uilibrium/It should be noted that the brine will need to be in a fairly tight fitting container (or vac/ziplock bag) to cover the meat. This is necessary to be able to create a brine with sufficient salt to keep the product safe throughout the curing period. I would not use this on pieces of meat above 3kg.
I hope this helps. Do not hesitate to post back here if you are concerned about any of it.
Phil
Edited to correct typos and add link