I have made my own cures containing nitrites and ones just with salt and sugar. Yes, the nitrite cures make the bacon look nicer, however, I can really get no discernible difference in flavour or texture. No nitrite does not look as appetising as with nitrite added but this is what we all think that bacon should look like (Supermarket brainwashing). I smoke mine too and would say homemade bacon is far superior to shop bought, just get over what it looks like. I can’t remember the last time I bought shop bacon. Love your sourdough videos btw. Your no waste starter is a winner👍
Yeah... as a person with arthritis, I made a 3 months on/off Sodium Nitrite study on my self. The meat cured with it tastes and looks better, but it triggers both arthritis and gout flareups. Without it I am OK.
I can 2nd this, I completely beat my arthritis by going carnivore. However when I use cure my knee flares up and I'm crippled for 5 days. I'm half way through fermenting celery to then dry and make a powder. I'll let you know how that pans out
@@allanpennington I've been full carnivore for 4 yrs already. I don't eat vegetables and using fermented celery as a bacon cure is going to be a test to see if that also causes an inflammation issue.
I find no issues with nitrate. I consume about 120g of pork bacon everyday. Tons of butter and about a pound of beef and some eggs. 100% carnivore. And I can consume beer like drinks on holidays. No issues.
With my homemade bacon, while the cure ingredients and time seem identical to yours, I then do an approx 6 hr cool smoke. In side by side test with and without the pink salt, none of us could differentiate the tastes - the smoke (which I think of as a key ingredient in bacon) may hide the difference.
Very interesting experiment! Can't say I've ever made bacon without nitrite. In the U.S. marketers make a big deal about "uncured" bacon, but here that just means that celery powder is used to provide roughly the same amount of nitrite as the Instacure #1 that you used. Just for the record, Instacure #1 is 15/16 salt, so the cured bacon actually has about 0.23% more salt.
Hi! I heard that sodium nitrite doesn't just bring the colour but also accelerate the curing process of the meat. Could the proper cured bacon taste be acquired without nitrites if the pork was just cured longer (I heard something like 3 time longer)? Thanks, very cool video!
Would be interesting if you did a blind taste test, to see how much difference you can taste when you aren't aware of the grey/rich pink contrast. The colour seemed to be the main sticking point for you. The pink in pink curing salt is just colouring to distinguish it from table salt - and I'm skeptical that the nitrate itself enhances the flavour.
Note that when you eat nitrate salt, you're potentially taking cancer causing elements. The fact that it's poisonous is a reason enough not to use it.. People were making bacon with salt and smoke for hundreds of years, i don't understand why would anyone in his sane mind risk to kill him self over some pink colour
One suggestion I've heard from an old butcher was if you're going to do it without the nitrates, after you finish the brine process and rinse it and dry it off while it's sitting he said to brush molasses or maple syrup on it so it'll have the extra sweet flavor to combat the saltiness which is what I'm going to try. He said don't drown it but a light brushing is what he's always done
It's just what your used to it's like coffee without sugar after a while it's grate but when you first change it's just not as good because it's not what you are expecting knowing what it does to your body I'm more than happy with a simple old salt cure 😁
Good to see a side-by-side comparison like this. Thank you for doing that. The next comparison you could do, is using a natural nitrate like celery juice?
Nitrates are poisonous. End of. But twas a great video I have been thinking of curing bacon with Pink Himalayan Salt, but I know it's not curing salt. Then again , I suppose one could mess around with different flavours. Using Himalayan Pink Salt and Apple cider vinegar, or Bourbon, or Whiskey etc.
From Costa Rica. Enjoyed your video. I weigh everything. I use exact recipe, salt 25 gr/kilo, brown sugar 25 gr/kilo, pink curing salt 2.5 gr/kilo, cure for 10 days under refrigeration, dry on towels for 24 hours under refrigeration, then cold smoke
Hi James. I live in Borneo and have been making my own bacon and ham for a while. For bacon, I've been sticking to a dry cure because I love the results. Very similar to this video but with the addition of black pepper and fennel seeds (for me the fennel makes a huge difference). For my ham, I've been wet curing. Since covid-19 hit the scene, I've been producing more of both to sell (I was previously working in tourism) and I'm running out of fridge space so am very interested in your igloo cooler method. I've got a couple of 200L coolers so am thinking of using these to wet cure with frozen coke bottles to keep things cold.... I'm obviously a bit worried about making sure things are kept cool enough to be safe. Do you have any formulas or more info on how many frozen bottles per liter of brine or anything similar? Any additional info would be very much appreciated!
@@riverjunkietours4956 I just finished curing and smoking a batch of pork two days ago. My typical cure consists of purchasing the mid-section of a hog consisting of the belly, sides and loins. This last purchase weighed forty-one kilos and came in two pieces. Since I help with the butchering, I had the option of making sure the cut was to my liking. I iced it all down immediately with twenty kilos of ice and took it home. The next morning the meat was very cold and that helps with cutting and trimming. I took each side and divided it as follows. I removed the ribs and then returned them to the igloo cooler. Then I skinned the entire side taking care not to remove anymore fat than necessary. The skin was later cut into half inch pieces and frozen in pint size bags. Next, I trimmed away any excessive fat, especially on the back and sides. This was later cut into small cubes and rendered into lard. We use a lot of lard at our house. Next, I separated the loin from the sides. We remove and save all bones to cook with beans, soups and stews. I cleaned my Igloo cooler, saving any ice that had not melted. This ice was weighed before returning it to the cooler since I have to know the exact weight of everything that goes in it. So, what I end up with is two slabs of ribs, two sides of pork w/belly attached, and two loins. The total net weight of the meat that I actually cured ended up being twenty-seven and one half kilos. From past experience, I know that I'm going to need a total weight of sixty kilos consisting of meat, ice and water in order to cover the meat completely and keep the meat below the water line. Use weights if necessary. I find that the coke bottles make good weights. So, I went to the store and bought another twenty kilos of ice. I weighed each bag because the weight on the bag isn't even close to the actual weight. After all the meat has been weighed, it's put in the cooler along with ice. Then I add sufficient water to bring the total weight to exactly sixty kilos. Next, I prepare my salt, brown sugar and curing salt. I use 25 grams per kilo for the salt and sugar and 2.5 grams/kilo for the curing salt. So, for sixty kilos I mix one and a half kilos of salt. One and a half kilos of brown sugar and 150 grams of curing salt. I mix it well and spread it over the top of the meat in the cooler. The temperature in the cooler will now plunge to a very low temperature. If your cooler is similar to mine, it will take a couple of days for the ice in the cooler to melt. Meanwhile, you can freeze four 2.5 liter coke bottles of water to be used as necessary once the bag ice has melted. Do not overfill these bottles. Only put about 2 liters of water in them or they'll rupture when they turn to ice. I use two bottles a day, on rare occasions a third. Changing them in the morning or whenever I see that the ice in them has completely melted. I cure for ten days or more depending upon when I can schedule the day of smoking. You will find that the contents of your cooler will stay very cold as these large coolers hold ice very well. In fact, you won't be able to keep you hands in the brine for more than a few seconds because it's so cold. The day before I plan to smoke, I remove all the meat, clean the cooler and then return the meat, resting it on clean bath towels to catch the liquid that drains. I put in frozen bottles to maintain the low temperature. I believe the dry cure method may be preferable for small batches but it's just not feasible for me with such large quantities. PS. I also use lots of fennel seeds. They are incredible in beans, soups, stews, bread, etc. Questions? Just ask.
Your video was SUPER! Your side by side comparison demo was very informative. Explaining each step was an excellent tool. Straight to the point within a good time frame. You know your craft.👍
Studies say the pink cured one only uses the sodium nitrate for the colour (Pink), so you shouldn't be able to taste a difference unless its your visual difference. I don't know too much about it, so I'm not sure.
Nitrites function to kill botulinum bacteria while curing so you don't die from eating a bacon sandwich. Even "no nitrites added" bacons will usually use celery or celery salt, which is a natural nitrite. You're telling me cooked spinach (which is high in nitrites) is toxic? Get outta here with that misinformation.
@@FlandraLabs For all I care you can eat whatever you want. But there is concern that nitrites heated above 110 Celsius when in contact with amino acids might form nitrosamines, compounds that increase risk of cancer. So, spinach when cooked alone, without meat present is not a concern. Boiled and smoked meat is also not a problem, but fried meat that has nitrites might be problematic.
I'm wondering the difference if you smoked it. Also it may need a longer cure without the nitrites. You could possibly but a little beet juice in your cure to redden the meat.
Such a good video! Thank you for doing this, I don't feel a lot of people would think to do this comparison and I completely agree, nothing against the no nitrate method but you can't escape your brain telling you "it's not bacon!" 😇
You really needed a blind taste tester, or have been blind tasting it yourself. Knowing which is which, your own bias towards the one you think you'll like better influences the results.
I will be trying my first ever attempt at curing bacon at home this weekend. I choose to omit nitrates, mainly cause I didn't want to go to another store. I hope I did screw up too much.
FYI, speaking from personal experience when I was a beginner chef just out of culinary school, DO NOT add too much sodium nitrate! I did and I was throwing up for the entire day and I only ate a thick slice of the bacon I made. It was brutal. Follow recipes like the one in the video, it’s safer.
Well, when my dad has made his own bacon it’s been vastly better than any shop bought bacon I’ve had but I will have to give him a call to ask whether he uses the nitrites or not. For me, whether to use them or not, I’m unsure, a deep part of me wants to keep foods as natural as possible and my mind is telling me the nitrites are something like synthetic or chemical additives to the food but I also know I really don’t know anything about nitrites to know how natural the product actually is. I have however bought a huge belly pork and will divide it in two and freeze half till I can get nitrites and make the other half without so I can compare both as you have.
In the Missouri Ozarks (USA) we had what we called "Fresh Side" , that is fresh pork belly that has not been cured. You sliced and fried. It has a different taste, but, is very good. No chemicals at all. RV
Thanks for the video! I skipped to the taste test and was not surprised to find that this wasn't one of those promoting the concept that there are so many things we've been doing wrong! One can guess from the start of such videos, what those "experts" are going to decide! The time tested work of those guys who have slogged to ensure a safe and tasty product shouldn't be wasted by some self righteous vigilantes! The real test for taste would be a blind fold test! Amateur efforts could produce a product which tastes like something gone slightly off or bad, which few would admit to! Don't get them for the taste trials!
I'm making my 1st ever home cured bacon as I type this (in the fridge an hour ago) Done deliberately without curing salt and as long as it tastes better than shop bought then Im good with that. Plus, once you add other things (burge or blt), than I'm sure all the other differences fall away
I cure my own bacon and I definitely can say that the bacon cured with pink salt is much better than without. What kind of sugar did you use in this video ? I always use dark brown sugar in mine and a little of pure maple syrup.
Hey. I really wanted to prefer the bacon without pink salt, because generally I prefer to omit any ingredient that's not needed. But I really didn't think the bacon without pink salt lived up to my expectations, or to the comparison. I used a simple white sugar in the video. I think a combination of white sugar and honey works well. I adjust it depending on the other seasonings that I may add.
You might try adding ground up celery or celery salt (in lieu of whatever salt you were using). Celery is full of naturally occuring nitrites (or is it nitrates?) and will help to give that nice pink colour and je ne sai quoi quality to the bacon. You'll have to surf the net to find quantities but it might be worth it.
@@georgecapra To be honest, I make bacon both with and without the nitrites, and I guess I prefer the nitrite simply because I am most familiar with the flavour. The celery does add a certain ...um, earthy? ... backnote to the bacon, but it's not offensive and you could always soak the bacon in cold water after it is cured to dilute the flavour (and the salt sometimes - slice a sliver off the end to check for both). Just pat dry and sit in on a rack or hang it to dry.
I cure a lot of bacon and I’m also a chef with meat science background. The main reason for using nitrites in cured bacon is for color and taste as you stated. The main thing I see (and didn’t see) is you didn’t smoke the bacon and the nitrites play an important role in the smoking process in keeping the product safe at lower temperatures. I’m American and we love the smoked taste on our bacon so maybe that isn’t a thing in the Uk so much. Bottom line is if you’re curing for preservation nitrites are the way to go for color, taste, shelf life and safety. ☮️❤️🥓
@@BernWag you need to bring the internal temperature of the bacon to 130 degrees F to set the color. You can stop there if you feel you got enough smoke or keep going to 150 degrees. If you stop at 130 you will need to cook the final product. 150 will produce a “ready to eat” product. As far as temperature goes I start low around 110 to dry the surface and prepare to apply smoke. Ideally you’d raise the temp slowly over the course of several hours to hit your target. If your grill can’t hold below 200 you may need to rethink your process.
Very helpful, thanks for posting. So 7x as much sugar in the no nitrite, does this sweeten the bacon (you mentioned saltiness). Also, can we assume both pieces of pork were exactly the same weight? (I'm building a scalable spreadsheet.) Thanks again!
I had a similar reaction when I cured beef brisket for the first time; it lacked that vibrant dark pink color, but it had the right taste. Long story short, I've used celery seed powder, which didn't do much, so I'm going to experiment with cherry powder and celery powder for when I cure my pork shoulder for ham. The only reason why I'm taking up on curing certain meats is because colon and intestinal cancer runs in my family, and the leading cause of both ailments is the consumption of processed foods like smoked ham, cheap bacon, junk food, frozen foods, and corned beef.
Oh well, I hadn't seen this video! As you said "like what we have learned to associate with bacon", though the real natural color of cooked pork is... grey. Since the 50's/60's the food industries have told people how foods are supposed to look and taste in huge lies. In France more and more the food industry is taking all additives out, so you have ham and bacon packets with "grey is the normal and natural color of porc" written on them because people were not buying them, thinking they were off. It's very funny but so pathetic at once. For my kids and myself I much prefer serving not too bad for your health grey meat than handsome but carcinogenic pink meat. Thanks for the video! Oh it's pork preparation time here and I'm making your leek sausages!
They also use to play with mercury, put lead in everything, and not protect themselves from radio active substances, so... being an old practice doesn't make it a good one.
Just discovered your channel, really nice. First was your sourdough which is clearly a very popular video, this bacon video is also very useful, thanks
I usually buy uncured and find the curing salt completely unnecesary. My homemade like your uncured is great! So easy! I used pork shoulder and it wasn't gray.
I cook the roast pork in the wood fire oven and it was a bit smoky and everyone commented that it tasted a bit like bacon I think you should try slightly smoking both of them and see what the difference is and you would be used to eating shop bought bacon and expecting that particular flavor
An old farmer friend told me that back in the 1940's, his dad would kill a pig on the farm and then cure the whole sides in the cellar. I asked him what 'cure' did they use, he said just salt and sugar, but his dad would rub in tiny amounts of saltpetre where the hip bone and shoulder blade bone had been removed. I'm assuming that the bacteria on the surface of the cut meat would react with the saltpetre and spread the nitrates across the carcass, converting them to nitrites. This would give it its pink colour and bacon flavour.
Think it's a bit over kill to take out a tea spoon of pink salt considering taste and preservation where people will eat a bag of flavored chips with over 30 chemicals. Its home cooked so it's good.
Would you use the same salt/sugar/instacure percentages for a pork loin (back bacon)? Also, any difference in curing time for loin? BTW, thanks Philip for doing this channel, I like your style!
@@CulinaryExploration I like your style too. The British friendliness, the pace, and the camera angles. Great videos. Thank you. Have you tried making Digestive Biscuits?
I did pig jowls with out nitrites I thought is was great my wife thought it was great now I am trying dried cured bacon not in plastic just in the fridge without nitrite might get a chance to let you know how it goes in about 5 days.
What if you smoke the no nitrates? If you do a low and slow smoke that won’t cook it then theoretically it should keep it pink. Plus you would get a delicious smoke flavor
I'm in France and get a piece of pork belly at the supermarket foire au porc. I've been a bit wary of the addition of nitrite, so what I do is to add powdered vitamin C - probably equal quantities nitriTe and vitamin c. I picked up somewhere that vitamin C counters the nitrite. I share the bacon with friends and have had no complaints. Good salting!
Yep, I had the exact same results as you did. I am English living in Bulgaria and have had to make my own bacon as the local "bacon" isn't up to much. I bought some ready made curing salt with nitrites in it from Weschenfelder which worked great but after that had run out and after viewing some TH-cam vids (American) it seems that one could just use salt (Himalayan pink salt is what I used)and sugar for the cure and skip the nitrites but alas no, the reality for me was grey salt pork that smelled and tasted like salt pork. Seems that the nitrites are essential for bacon unless you like a salt pork sandwich!
I'm with you completely. I think for people that decide to avoid nitrites the result from salt and sugar is ok. But in my opinion, for true bacon like you'd get from a decent butchers shop, you need the nitrites. Big thanks for watching and appreciate the feedback! Hope all is well in Bulgaria.
Excellent video. Is it just me, or your pink salt doesn't look pink on the video? I am trying to find one without the red dye, but seems to be impossible. The one you use doesn't look dyed, so I thought I would ask.
I wonder if there is a connection between nitrited bacon and back pain..i have been experiencing knee and back pain 6 weeks into carnivore diet consisting of beef , eggs , pork and bacon and sausages...I am suspecting bacon and sausages as these are processed
Interesting comparison Tomorrow I will try my first time to make pancetta. I have sodium nitrite. How much I must use? According to maximum every day permitted dose I calculated 3.7 grams per kg of meet. Call it 4. Is this correct?
Hello from Singapore! I plan to cure my ham/bacon with no curing salt & this video was very helpful. I’ve read many articles about substituting curing salt with “celery juice” or “celery powder”, have u tried it or will u make a video comparison too pls?
I make my bacon with nitrites. Nitrites don't only act as a preservative against botulism (Clostridium botulinum infection), but give that classic bacon taste. For those of us like myself that enjoy cool smoked bacon, it's good that a proper cure be done so that pathogenic bacteria like Clostridium do not multiply while kept above 4 degrees C during the smoking process. This could be more important with ground-up cured meats like salami though.
I agree Gerry, I haven't been able to achieve that classic bacon flavour without using nitrites. Have you tried the naked bacon without nitrites in the shops? They claim to have replicated the taste but I haven't tried it yet, have you?
@@CulinaryExploration We have several brands of bacon in Canada, all that deceptively say "No preservatives, all natural". They all have one thing is common. They list "celery extract" as an ingredient. This is sodium nitrite derived from celery plants. The chemist in me says that sodium nitrite is sodium nitrite, regardless of its origin. It's simply a scam by the food industry to fool people into thinking it's more healthy. So yeah, I'm sure it tastes like bacon, since it contains sodium nitrite. Incidentally, the biggest source of nitrates/nitrites in people's diets are from fresh healthy vegetables. LOL
We have a brand in the UK manufactured by Finnebrogue and their naked bacon range claims to use no nitrites or substitutes. Apparently the addition of a Mediterranean fruit blend delivers a product that tastes and smells like bacon. I haven't had the opportunity to try it yet. I agree regarding your comment about celery salt. Another example of the consumer being let down, or more appropriately mislead by substandard labelling laws.
@@GerryMantha I agree with all you mentioned Gerry. It is a scam used by sneaky smallgoods manufacturers, to deceive people into thinking they are getting a nitrite free product, which we know that it isn't. Sodium nitrite is sodium nitrite, regardless of its origin. I too use nitrite when curing meat or fish.
How much sodium nitrite in grams is added to the dry brine for one kilogram of meat that would be dried with cold smoke? in sweden there is 20 grams of salt per kilogram...is that ok? ovdthanks
This is how they make bacon? I wonder who first thought of doing random crap like “curing” and for what reason. But how does salt get into the middle of the wedge of meat ?
🤩🤩🤩👍👍👍👍👍Going to try your formula n process. I just have this problem of differentiating sod nitrite food grade vs non FG as it is difficult to buy this item in my country n how it really looks like.
From what I understand the nitrites com into play slower with the salt only. if the bacon is left to age a couple of weeks it might make a difference. I am thinking this might be the case since adding the pink cure is like instant nitrates instead of the natural salt converting to nitrites over time. Just a theory .
I will be experimenting more David. I am playing with some Guanciale that I am curing with no nitrites and will let this age for several weeks. I know that Parma ham is made without nitrites and they still obtain an amazing rosey colour and an unrivalled texture. This is an extremely interesting topic that's going to give me hours of research! Have you made any cured products at home?
Hey Lee, I have been experimenting with the recipe. I am nearly happy with it. The process takes some time so it's not possible to produce the video quickly. Stay tuned, it will be here late in the year
wtf. Botulism only affect USA? because here in eastern europe our parents and grandparents cure the meat with no "pink salt" and i never heard someone to have a problem. Also here is very very difficult to procure this salt. under any circumstances u cant find pure like what you have #1 and #2 .. in the best way you can get a mix of regular salt and added 0.5% Sodium Nitrite.. Also, this bacteria is not dangerous only if you eat meat raw? once you fry your bacon, this bacteria (assuming is present) is not destroyed? One more think.. what is the purpose of sugar ? Did you ever try to cure your meat without sugar? Add just 2%salt, and spices .. you will be surprised.. And the remark "with pink salt is like bacon is supposed to be" is very stupid! .. No, is not supposed to be like that ... big companies teach you to eat that crap, but that isn't normal ...
I've got a slab in the fridge right now (day 5) with no pink salt because i wanted to try it out. This is my first time. Hope i did it right... Lol. I'm going to try with nitrites next, wish me luck!
How long can you leave the meat curing before it goes bad? We did a cure, the meat in air-tight bags within a water proof plastic container, leaving the meat for around 3 weeks and it all went bad. (We were taking 2 bags out at a time as that was all we had space for within the fridge) Was this just due to the time left or could there be other reasons?
I rarely eat bacon, so can't claim any knowledge of the difference. However, I've always thought that the sole role of sodium nitrite was as a preservative.
Not sure whether you've updated the process or had anyone else say this, but a version of the no-nitrite version I've heard of involves much larger salt crystals and making sure the meat does not sit in the water that drains off it during the curing process. Very coarse salt, in other words (e.g., Himalayan Sea Salt) and either regularly draining the off water or storing in something with holes at the bottom and a vessel underneath (preventing one's fridge from getting salty pork water all over it) are how I've seen it done. Would be interested to know whether you've ever tried or considered this method. Thanks.
Sorry. I should mention--because I didn't directly say it--that this all is in service of the final product not coming out nearly as salty as otherwise. That, at least, is the claim. I have yet to try it myself, but anticipate doing so in near future. Thanks for the ❤️ and right back at 'ya! 😁
I'm a little bothered using nitrate because of what I read in recent years that it can cause cancer. But not sure if this is really true and if it is, I wanted to know if there is just a specific amount of nitrate to ingest to cause cancer, or does it accumulate through years of consumption until it leads or causes CA? :(
The nitrate scare is not true. But, first thing first - sodium nitrite is poisonous in small amounts. It only takes 4 grams for an adult-sized person to die. With that out the way, keep in mind, that vegetables, such as celery and beet, contain a lot of nitrates, which are reduced by the bacteria in our gut into nitrites. So, you get about 100x more nitrites via vegetable than from any hams or sausages. These "natural" nitrites then are secreted in our own saliva, so you're literally swallowing nitrites every minute. Do nitrites cause cancer? The short answer - no. What do cause cancer are nitrite-protein remnants, called nitrosamines (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrosamine). They form when you heat proteins, treated with nitrites, to a very high temperature. So, don't scorch your food, and you'll be fine. (Scorched foot tastes horrible anyway).
@@CulinaryExploration you’re a bloody legend mate!! I’m an Australian and I loved the English bacon when I was there and now thanks to you I can enjoy it here! You bloody ripper 🍻🍻
@@lukeporter1870 That's awesome man. I've got some more videos coming on bacon, different ways of curing and cooking, plus what I think is the best bacon Ive ever eaten... I'll leave you with that thought lol, I hope to get the vids sorted in the next couple of months. Great to have someone in Australia making use of my recipes!
Morton Tender Quick mix contains salt, the main preserving agent; sugar, both sodium nitrate and sodium nitrite, curing agents that also contribute to development of color and flavor; and propylene glycol to keep the mixture uniform.
See i wish i paid attention the first time, when i went to get the nitrate salt it come out loads cheaper to get a big bucket, so i got 10kg of the stuff. Should be able to make an industrial batch for the next 10 years in Germany lol, I might make my own shop All just gone in the fridge, ill report back my opinion when i tried it ;)
As a strict carnivore I cringe at adding sugar. That’s why I make my own. Otherwise I can just buy is without all of the work and actually would be cheaper
Ex bacon butcher here...There's also collar bacon (horrible!) And oyster cut, longback, middlecut etc.....shops don't sell those cuts (rashers) any more and no one leaves the rind on...sacrilige! .... all heil the saltpetre....
its all about what are you used to , and psychology . the pink bacon looks better there is no way of denying that , BUT i am lucky enough to have grown up on natural old fashioned home made bacon , which used traditional table salt to cure and i much prefer the taste of that to the mass produced factory sodium nitrite cured type . its all in our head , but knowing about the carcinogenic properties of the nitrates i am not eating that stuff anymore .
Thanks for the side by side! I was considering not using the curing salt on my next bacon but I'm second guessing that now. Appreciate it! Sub from me 👍
I have actually. I wet brined a cut of pork neck to make a Christmas ham over the holiday. As I had a big container I popped in a big piece of belly. When it had cured I found it took on a lot of water (didn't cook so well in the pan) so I popped it in a zip lock and cooked it sous vide at around 60c. This pushed a lot of the water out and made crisping up in the pan a breeze. What's your favourite way? Cheers, Phil
@@CulinaryExploration I can see where you would have water issues there. I put my side of pig in a wine vat we have with 15 litres of tap water, 10 cups of rock salt and 7 cups of brown sugar, bring it to the boil and let it cool once all the ingredients are well mixed and dissolved. Then in with the pig side for 5 days making sure all sides are well covered. Then out and rinse and placed in our walk in fridge for 20 days, after that I take out the belly and back bacon and smoke them. I'm lucky enough to have a share in a walk in fridge as part of a hunting team, we have the facilities here in the bush and hunt Sambar deer and hog. In the UK maybe use the bath tub then instead of a walk in why not hang the beast in a fabricated bug proof box and hang her from the highest branch you can find? Love the vids BTW. Cheers Moose.
Don't know how my wife would feel about me taking over the bath tub for five days or so LOLOL - I tend to do smaller cuts in large container in a spare fridge, then I turn that fridge into the drying space. I wouldn't mind trying an air dried ham one day. Cheers for stopping by Moose. Take care, Phil
Thanks for the video. It's true you cannot get away from it tasting like salted pork instead of that bacon flavour needed to satisfy the bacon receptors in the brain. I have a loin in the fridge at the moment EQ with 2% pepper. I find the pepper is a good media to spread the cure. Unlike you though i just leave it on a rack and not in a bag. Then hang in my pantry for 24hrs, into a cardboard box to smoke for 4hrs and then time to enjoy. Keep up the bacon brotherhood.
What difference do you find with curing on a rack and not in a bag? Do you find it begins to loose moisture quicker? I may try this method so if you could give me a little incite id be grateful!
@@CulinaryExploration well for me I am aiming dry cured bacon so logically i dont want it sitting in liquid for a week. Just be careful because i have a dedicated fridge in the garage that just does bacon so as not to get off flavours from random food. Maybe thats when the bag is good if it is with other food. Hey just had an idea. Why dont you do a video of bag vs rack? That way you could compare the textures at different days.
I've got a dedicated fridge for my meaty projects so no worries. I'll try the dry cure out after the pancetta has finished. If I can get an appreciable difference then I'll look at how the video could work. I am really pleased with the pancetta, I blended the spice coating to compliment my carbonara, it's awesome. Really good to chat, love connecting with likeminded people.
@@CulinaryExploration I'm with you Philip, in keeping the meat being cured in the bag. The same applies to curing fish. As you know, the salt and sugar extract moisture from the meat; the idea is not to just remove the moisture from the meat, but to also cure it. I usually leave the meat or fish in contact with its juices, in a bag with the air removed and turn the meat over every 24 hours, in order for the cure to penetrate the meat from all sides; I do this for about 1 week. After that, I begin the moisture extraction process, in order to achieve the results that I am aiming for. I have cured fish by this method, for 6 weeks, without the need to rinse the final product. If you start off with the correct quantity of salt, per kilogram of meat, it will never be too salty, regardless of how long the curing process takes. I hope this helps. Greetings from Australia
I would rather have natural color than artificial color and chemicals. It takes time for our bodies to adjust to proper flavor from natural ingredients. Bacon made with chemicals is not Bacon!
I have made my own cures containing nitrites and ones just with salt and sugar. Yes, the nitrite cures make the bacon look nicer, however, I can really get no discernible difference in flavour or texture. No nitrite does not look as appetising as with nitrite added but this is what we all think that bacon should look like (Supermarket brainwashing). I smoke mine too and would say homemade bacon is far superior to shop bought, just get over what it looks like. I can’t remember the last time I bought shop bacon. Love your sourdough videos btw. Your no waste starter is a winner👍
saltpetre (nitrates) has been commonly used in bacon curing in Britain since 1700 or so.
It's got a history as a preservative going back to antiquity.
Do you sold or hot smoke?
@@mytimetravellingdog we used to think mercy was good for us also
Nitrates in high doses can KILL you
This means it is a poison
It's all in the dosage
Yeah... as a person with arthritis, I made a 3 months on/off Sodium Nitrite study on my self. The meat cured with it tastes and looks better, but it triggers both arthritis and gout flareups. Without it I am OK.
I can 2nd this, I completely beat my arthritis by going carnivore.
However when I use cure my knee flares up and I'm crippled for 5 days.
I'm half way through fermenting celery to then dry and make a powder.
I'll let you know how that pans out
@@fryertuck6496 Have you researched how much naturally occurring nitrates are in vegetables, celery, spinach, beets are high on the list.
@@allanpennington I've been full carnivore for 4 yrs already.
I don't eat vegetables and using fermented celery as a bacon cure is going to be a test to see if that also causes an inflammation issue.
I find no issues with nitrate. I consume about 120g of pork bacon everyday. Tons of butter and about a pound of beef and some eggs. 100% carnivore. And I can consume beer like drinks on holidays. No issues.
@@z00011001 Do/did you have arthritis?
With my homemade bacon, while the cure ingredients and time seem identical to yours, I then do an approx 6 hr cool smoke. In side by side test with and without the pink salt, none of us could differentiate the tastes - the smoke (which I think of as a key ingredient in bacon) may hide the difference.
Great video but I was going 😱 he forgot to smoke it
smoke chemically introduces nitrites into the bacon.
@@ScrtAznMnI also cold smoke bacon, it stops that rancid tang which is off-putting.
Very interesting experiment! Can't say I've ever made bacon without nitrite. In the U.S. marketers make a big deal about "uncured" bacon, but here that just means that celery powder is used to provide roughly the same amount of nitrite as the Instacure #1 that you used. Just for the record, Instacure #1 is 15/16 salt, so the cured bacon actually has about 0.23% more salt.
I never thought to cure bacon at home. I'm glad I found your vid. Thank you.
It tastes great too! Glad to have you following the channel :)
Hi! I heard that sodium nitrite doesn't just bring the colour but also accelerate the curing process of the meat. Could the proper cured bacon taste be acquired without nitrites if the pork was just cured longer (I heard something like 3 time longer)? Thanks, very cool video!
Would be interesting if you did a blind taste test, to see how much difference you can taste when you aren't aware of the grey/rich pink contrast. The colour seemed to be the main sticking point for you. The pink in pink curing salt is just colouring to distinguish it from table salt - and I'm skeptical that the nitrate itself enhances the flavour.
The best taste test I have is letting my children decide which one they prefer.
@@foedspaghetti3290 better for your kids is to not let them taste that Sodium Nitrite ...
@@Alerya, don’t worry, my son won’t touch it.
Right. It really seemed like it was because his mind was made up. He said himself they basically taste the same.
Note that when you eat nitrate salt, you're potentially taking cancer causing elements. The fact that it's poisonous is a reason enough not to use it.. People were making bacon with salt and smoke for hundreds of years, i don't understand why would anyone in his sane mind risk to kill him self over some pink colour
One suggestion I've heard from an old butcher was if you're going to do it without the nitrates, after you finish the brine process and rinse it and dry it off while it's sitting he said to brush molasses or maple syrup on it so it'll have the extra sweet flavor to combat the saltiness which is what I'm going to try. He said don't drown it but a light brushing is what he's always done
It's just what your used to it's like coffee without sugar after a while it's grate but when you first change it's just not as good because it's not what you are expecting knowing what it does to your body I'm more than happy with a simple old salt cure 😁
Good to see a side-by-side comparison like this. Thank you for doing that. The next comparison you could do, is using a natural nitrate like celery juice?
Nitrates are poisonous. End of. But twas a great video I have been thinking of curing bacon with Pink Himalayan Salt, but I know it's not curing salt. Then again , I suppose one could mess around with different flavours.
Using Himalayan Pink Salt and Apple cider vinegar, or Bourbon, or Whiskey etc.
Even the ones in veggies?
th-cam.com/video/8Ygs2j0v0sU/w-d-xo.html
From Costa Rica. Enjoyed your video.
I weigh everything. I use exact recipe, salt 25 gr/kilo, brown sugar 25 gr/kilo, pink curing salt 2.5 gr/kilo, cure for 10 days under refrigeration, dry on towels for 24 hours under refrigeration, then cold smoke
You sell online by chance?
@@lizicadumitru9683 I have sold items on Ebay in the past but presently I only buy items. What is your interest?
Hi James. I live in Borneo and have been making my own bacon and ham for a while. For bacon, I've been sticking to a dry cure because I love the results. Very similar to this video but with the addition of black pepper and fennel seeds (for me the fennel makes a huge difference). For my ham, I've been wet curing. Since covid-19 hit the scene, I've been producing more of both to sell (I was previously working in tourism) and I'm running out of fridge space so am very interested in your igloo cooler method. I've got a couple of 200L coolers so am thinking of using these to wet cure with frozen coke bottles to keep things cold.... I'm obviously a bit worried about making sure things are kept cool enough to be safe. Do you have any formulas or more info on how many frozen bottles per liter of brine or anything similar? Any additional info would be very much appreciated!
@@riverjunkietours4956 I just finished curing and smoking a batch of pork two days ago. My typical cure consists of purchasing the mid-section of a hog consisting of the belly, sides and loins. This last purchase weighed forty-one kilos and came in two pieces. Since I help with the butchering, I had the option of making sure the cut was to my liking. I iced it all down immediately with twenty kilos of ice and took it home.
The next morning the meat was very cold and that helps with cutting and trimming. I took each side and divided it as follows. I removed the ribs and then returned them to the igloo cooler. Then I skinned the entire side taking care not to remove anymore fat than necessary. The skin was later cut into half inch pieces and frozen in pint size bags.
Next, I trimmed away any excessive fat, especially on the back and sides. This was later cut into small cubes and rendered into lard. We use a lot of lard at our house.
Next, I separated the loin from the sides. We remove and save all bones to cook with beans, soups and stews.
I cleaned my Igloo cooler, saving any ice that had not melted. This ice was weighed before returning it to the cooler since I have to know the exact weight of everything that goes in it.
So, what I end up with is two slabs of ribs, two sides of pork w/belly attached, and two loins. The total net weight of the meat that I actually cured ended up being twenty-seven and one half kilos.
From past experience, I know that I'm going to need a total weight of sixty kilos consisting of meat, ice and water in order to cover the meat completely and keep the meat below the water line. Use weights if necessary. I find that the coke bottles make good weights.
So, I went to the store and bought another twenty kilos of ice. I weighed each bag because the weight on the bag isn't even close to the actual weight. After all the meat has been weighed, it's put in the cooler along with ice. Then I add sufficient water to bring the total weight to exactly sixty kilos.
Next, I prepare my salt, brown sugar and curing salt. I use 25 grams per kilo for the salt and sugar and 2.5 grams/kilo for the curing salt. So, for sixty kilos I mix one and a half kilos of salt. One and a half kilos of brown sugar and 150 grams of curing salt. I mix it well and spread it over the top of the meat in the cooler.
The temperature in the cooler will now plunge to a very low temperature. If your cooler is similar to mine, it will take a couple of days for the ice in the cooler to melt. Meanwhile, you can freeze four 2.5 liter coke bottles of water to be used as necessary once the bag ice has melted. Do not overfill these bottles. Only put about 2 liters of water in them or they'll rupture when they turn to ice.
I use two bottles a day, on rare occasions a third. Changing them in the morning or whenever I see that the ice in them has completely melted. I cure for ten days or more depending upon when I can schedule the day of smoking. You will find that the contents of your cooler will stay very cold as these large coolers hold ice very well. In fact, you won't be able to keep you hands in the brine for more than a few seconds because it's so cold.
The day before I plan to smoke, I remove all the meat, clean the cooler and then return the meat, resting it on clean bath towels to catch the liquid that drains. I put in frozen bottles to maintain the low temperature.
I believe the dry cure method may be preferable for small batches but it's just not feasible for me with such large quantities. PS. I also use lots of fennel seeds. They are incredible in beans, soups, stews, bread, etc.
Questions? Just ask.
@@jamesyoung1022 Thanks for your detailed reply! Any questions down the line and I'll let you know.
Your video was SUPER! Your side by side comparison demo was very informative.
Explaining each step was an excellent tool. Straight to the point within a good time frame. You know your craft.👍
Studies say the pink cured one only uses the sodium nitrate for the colour (Pink), so you shouldn't be able to taste a difference unless its your visual difference. I don't know too much about it, so I'm not sure.
Nitrites become much more dangerous when heated above 130 Celsius, basically it is bad idea to fry food with nitrite salt.
Nitrites function to kill botulinum bacteria while curing so you don't die from eating a bacon sandwich. Even "no nitrites added" bacons will usually use celery or celery salt, which is a natural nitrite. You're telling me cooked spinach (which is high in nitrites) is toxic? Get outta here with that misinformation.
@@FlandraLabs For all I care you can eat whatever you want. But there is concern that nitrites heated above 110 Celsius when in contact with amino acids might form nitrosamines, compounds that increase risk of cancer. So, spinach when cooked alone, without meat present is not a concern. Boiled and smoked meat is also not a problem, but fried meat that has nitrites might be problematic.
Don't stir fry your celery.
I'm wondering the difference if you smoked it. Also it may need a longer cure without the nitrites. You could possibly but a little beet juice in your cure to redden the meat.
Great video. I have had the same experience with making my own bacon. I am now trying to find recipes that make the difference less noticeable.
Such a good video! Thank you for doing this, I don't feel a lot of people would think to do this comparison and I completely agree, nothing against the no nitrate method but you can't escape your brain telling you "it's not bacon!" 😇
You really needed a blind taste tester, or have been blind tasting it yourself. Knowing which is which, your own bias towards the one you think you'll like better influences the results.
I will be trying my first ever attempt at curing bacon at home this weekend. I choose to omit nitrates, mainly cause I didn't want to go to another store. I hope I did screw up too much.
FYI, speaking from personal experience when I was a beginner chef just out of culinary school, DO NOT add too much sodium nitrate! I did and I was throwing up for the entire day and I only ate a thick slice of the bacon I made. It was brutal. Follow recipes like the one in the video, it’s safer.
Well, when my dad has made his own bacon it’s been vastly better than any shop bought bacon I’ve had but I will have to give him a call to ask whether he uses the nitrites or not. For me, whether to use them or not, I’m unsure, a deep part of me wants to keep foods as natural as possible and my mind is telling me the nitrites are something like synthetic or chemical additives to the food but I also know I really don’t know anything about nitrites to know how natural the product actually is. I have however bought a huge belly pork and will divide it in two and freeze half till I can get nitrites and make the other half without so I can compare both as you have.
In the Missouri Ozarks (USA) we had what we called "Fresh Side" , that is fresh pork belly that has not been cured. You sliced and fried. It has a different taste, but, is very good. No chemicals at all. RV
Hey there, thanks for commenting. So there is no salt cure added at all? It's great to know how are people around the world prepare things :)
Thanks for the video!
I skipped to the taste test and was not surprised to find that this wasn't one of those promoting the concept that there are so many things we've been doing wrong!
One can guess from the start of such videos, what those "experts" are going to decide!
The time tested work of those guys who have slogged to ensure a safe and tasty product shouldn't be wasted by some self righteous vigilantes!
The real test for taste would be a blind fold test!
Amateur efforts could produce a product which tastes like something gone slightly off or bad, which few would admit to! Don't get them for the taste trials!
I'm making my 1st ever home cured bacon as I type this (in the fridge an hour ago)
Done deliberately without curing salt and as long as it tastes better than shop bought then Im good with that.
Plus, once you add other things (burge or blt), than I'm sure all the other differences fall away
I cure my own bacon and I definitely can say that the bacon cured with pink salt is much better than without. What kind of sugar did you use in this video ? I always use dark brown sugar in mine and a little of pure maple syrup.
Hey. I really wanted to prefer the bacon without pink salt, because generally I prefer to omit any ingredient that's not needed. But I really didn't think the bacon without pink salt lived up to my expectations, or to the comparison.
I used a simple white sugar in the video. I think a combination of white sugar and honey works well. I adjust it depending on the other seasonings that I may add.
You might try adding ground up celery or celery salt (in lieu of whatever salt you were using). Celery is full of naturally occuring nitrites (or is it nitrates?) and will help to give that nice pink colour and je ne sai quoi quality to the bacon. You'll have to surf the net to find quantities but it might be worth it.
But the celery salt or powder does not change the taste and flavor of the bacon ?
@@georgecapra To be honest, I make bacon both with and without the nitrites, and I guess I prefer the nitrite simply because I am most familiar with the flavour. The celery does add a certain ...um, earthy? ... backnote to the bacon, but it's not offensive and you could always soak the bacon in cold water after it is cured to dilute the flavour (and the salt sometimes - slice a sliver off the end to check for both). Just pat dry and sit in on a rack or hang it to dry.
I cure a lot of bacon and I’m also a chef with meat science background. The main reason for using nitrites in cured bacon is for color and taste as you stated. The main thing I see (and didn’t see) is you didn’t smoke the bacon and the nitrites play an important role in the smoking process in keeping the product safe at lower temperatures. I’m American and we love the smoked taste on our bacon so maybe that isn’t a thing in the Uk so much.
Bottom line is if you’re curing for preservation nitrites are the way to go for color, taste, shelf life and safety. ☮️❤️🥓
I'm new at DIY bacon, what is the temp of your smoke? I have a Traeger grill and I have trouble keeping the temp consistently under 200F.
@@BernWag you need to bring the internal temperature of the bacon to 130 degrees F to set the color. You can stop there if you feel you got enough smoke or keep going to 150 degrees. If you stop at 130 you will need to cook the final product. 150 will produce a “ready to eat” product. As far as temperature goes I start low around 110 to dry the surface and prepare to apply smoke. Ideally you’d raise the temp slowly over the course of several hours to hit your target. If your grill can’t hold below 200 you may need to rethink your process.
I agree for this test to be accurate it needs to be a blind test.
Very helpful thanks - Ive been making bacon for years and considering pink salt for a while - I'll give it a go
Very helpful, thanks for posting. So 7x as much sugar in the no nitrite, does this sweeten the bacon (you mentioned saltiness). Also, can we assume both pieces of pork were exactly the same weight? (I'm building a scalable spreadsheet.) Thanks again!
I had a similar reaction when I cured beef brisket for the first time; it lacked that vibrant dark pink color, but it had the right taste. Long story short, I've used celery seed powder, which didn't do much, so I'm going to experiment with cherry powder and celery powder for when I cure my pork shoulder for ham.
The only reason why I'm taking up on curing certain meats is because colon and intestinal cancer runs in my family, and the leading cause of both ailments is the consumption of processed foods like smoked ham, cheap bacon, junk food, frozen foods, and corned beef.
Oh well, I hadn't seen this video! As you said "like what we have learned to associate with bacon", though the real natural color of cooked pork is... grey. Since the 50's/60's the food industries have told people how foods are supposed to look and taste in huge lies. In France more and more the food industry is taking all additives out, so you have ham and bacon packets with "grey is the normal and natural color of porc" written on them because people were not buying them, thinking they were off. It's very funny but so pathetic at once. For my kids and myself I much prefer serving not too bad for your health grey meat than handsome but carcinogenic pink meat. Thanks for the video! Oh it's pork preparation time here and I'm making your leek sausages!
since the 1700s you mean (that's when we started using saltpetre in curing meat in Britain).
Well said
They also use to play with mercury, put lead in everything, and not protect themselves from radio active substances, so... being an old practice doesn't make it a good one.
Interesting 👍🏻
Just discovered your channel, really nice. First was your sourdough which is clearly a very popular video, this bacon video is also very useful, thanks
Thanks for watching!
Same!!!
Would you like to do a vid' on whether nitrates are healthy?
th-cam.com/video/8Ygs2j0v0sU/w-d-xo.html
I usually buy uncured and find the curing salt completely unnecesary. My homemade like your uncured is great! So easy! I used pork shoulder and it wasn't gray.
I cook the roast pork in the wood fire oven and it was a bit smoky and everyone commented that it tasted a bit like bacon I think you should try slightly smoking both of them and see what the difference is and you would be used to eating shop bought bacon and expecting that particular flavor
An old farmer friend told me that back in the 1940's, his dad would kill a pig on the farm and then cure the whole sides in the cellar. I asked him what 'cure' did they use, he said just salt and sugar, but his dad would rub in tiny amounts of saltpetre where the hip bone and shoulder blade bone had been removed. I'm assuming that the bacteria on the surface of the cut meat would react with the saltpetre and spread the nitrates across the carcass, converting them to nitrites. This would give it its pink colour and bacon flavour.
Think it's a bit over kill to take out a tea spoon of pink salt considering taste and preservation where people will eat a bag of flavored chips with over 30 chemicals. Its home cooked so it's good.
Would you use the same salt/sugar/instacure percentages for a pork loin (back bacon)? Also, any difference in curing time for loin? BTW, thanks Philip for doing this channel, I like your style!
I'd use exactly the same percentages and process Bryan. You will need to extend the process as the loin is thicker. Cheers for the feedback matey
@@CulinaryExploration I like your style too. The British friendliness, the pace, and the camera angles. Great videos. Thank you. Have you tried making Digestive Biscuits?
I did pig jowls with out nitrites I thought is was great my wife thought it was great now I am trying dried cured bacon not in plastic just in the fridge without nitrite might get a chance to let you know how it goes in about 5 days.
What if you smoke the no nitrates? If you do a low and slow smoke that won’t cook it then theoretically it should keep it pink. Plus you would get a delicious smoke flavor
Just found this randomly while looking at lonzino, im glad to know I can use my pink salt for bacon though! Great vid
Cheers for watching, works great for bacon, and for cured and boiled / smoked ham :)
Just make sure it isn’t pink salt himalaya
@@soniamonterog lol yeah
I'm in France and get a piece of pork belly at the supermarket foire au porc.
I've been a bit wary of the addition of nitrite, so what I do is to add powdered vitamin C - probably equal quantities nitriTe and vitamin c.
I picked up somewhere that vitamin C counters the nitrite. I share the bacon with friends and have had no complaints.
Good salting!
Yep, I had the exact same results as you did. I am English living in Bulgaria and have had to make my own bacon as the local "bacon" isn't up to much. I bought some ready made curing salt with nitrites in it from Weschenfelder which worked great but after that had run out and after viewing some TH-cam vids (American) it seems that one could just use salt (Himalayan pink salt is what I used)and sugar for the cure and skip the nitrites but alas no, the reality for me was grey salt pork that smelled and tasted like salt pork. Seems that the nitrites are essential for bacon unless you like a salt pork sandwich!
I'm with you completely. I think for people that decide to avoid nitrites the result from salt and sugar is ok. But in my opinion, for true bacon like you'd get from a decent butchers shop, you need the nitrites. Big thanks for watching and appreciate the feedback! Hope all is well in Bulgaria.
@@CulinaryExploration and smoking?
This is funny because it doesn't effect taste. only used as a preservative and to add a pink color to make it more pleasing to the eye.
Do you think it is a huge cost effective / saving thing to cure at home, love the idea.
Excellent video. Is it just me, or your pink salt doesn't look pink on the video? I am trying to find one without the red dye, but seems to be impossible. The one you use doesn't look dyed, so I thought I would ask.
What if you put the bacon in the oven? I wonder what the difference would look like then
Even though you liked the Indra cured bacon better were they both better than store bought?
I wonder if there is a connection between nitrited bacon and back pain..i have been experiencing knee and back pain 6 weeks into carnivore diet consisting of beef , eggs , pork and bacon and sausages...I am suspecting bacon and sausages as these are processed
How much do you think the wash makes the nitrites disappear leaving just the effect of them?
Interesting comparison
Tomorrow I will try my first time to make pancetta.
I have sodium nitrite.
How much I must use?
According to maximum every day permitted dose I calculated 3.7 grams per kg of meet. Call it 4.
Is this correct?
Hello from Singapore! I plan to cure my ham/bacon with no curing salt & this video was very helpful. I’ve read many articles about substituting curing salt with “celery juice” or “celery powder”, have u tried it or will u make a video comparison too pls?
I guess that he doesn't know...
I make my bacon with nitrites. Nitrites don't only act as a preservative against botulism (Clostridium botulinum infection), but give that classic bacon taste. For those of us like myself that enjoy cool smoked bacon, it's good that a proper cure be done so that pathogenic bacteria like Clostridium do not multiply while kept above 4 degrees C during the smoking process. This could be more important with ground-up cured meats like salami though.
I agree Gerry, I haven't been able to achieve that classic bacon flavour without using nitrites. Have you tried the naked bacon without nitrites in the shops? They claim to have replicated the taste but I haven't tried it yet, have you?
@@CulinaryExploration
We have several brands of bacon in Canada, all that deceptively say "No preservatives, all natural". They all have one thing is common. They list "celery extract" as an ingredient. This is sodium nitrite derived from celery plants. The chemist in me says that sodium nitrite is sodium nitrite, regardless of its origin. It's simply a scam by the food industry to fool people into thinking it's more healthy. So yeah, I'm sure it tastes like bacon, since it contains sodium nitrite.
Incidentally, the biggest source of nitrates/nitrites in people's diets are from fresh healthy vegetables. LOL
We have a brand in the UK manufactured by Finnebrogue and their naked bacon range claims to use no nitrites or substitutes. Apparently the addition of a Mediterranean fruit blend delivers a product that tastes and smells like bacon. I haven't had the opportunity to try it yet. I agree regarding your comment about celery salt. Another example of the consumer being let down, or more appropriately mislead by substandard labelling laws.
@@GerryMantha I agree with all you mentioned Gerry. It is a scam used by sneaky smallgoods manufacturers, to deceive people into thinking they are getting a nitrite free product, which we know that it isn't. Sodium nitrite is sodium nitrite, regardless of its origin. I too use nitrite when curing meat or fish.
How much sodium nitrite in grams is added to the dry brine for one kilogram of meat that would be dried with cold smoke? in sweden there is 20 grams of salt per kilogram...is that ok? ovdthanks
This is how they make bacon? I wonder who first thought of doing random crap like “curing” and for what reason. But how does salt get into the middle of the wedge of meat ?
Just season uncurled bacon more I tried it and it worked for me
6 months into my "new" bacon hobby....
so true... A LITTLE #2 goes a LONG way and makes a HUGE difference...... it's well worth it for great bacon!!!
How do you wash that cutting board
I use brown sugar and maple syrup, salt ,no nitrite, cold smoked and it tastes good.
I'm new at DIY bacon, what is the temp of your smoke? I have a Traeger grill and I have trouble keeping the temp consistently under 200F.
Flavour doesnt mean much when your dead 😄 lol .
Stay healthy .
Eat for an extended amount of years
🤩🤩🤩👍👍👍👍👍Going to try your formula n process. I just have this problem of differentiating sod nitrite food grade vs non FG as it is difficult to buy this item in my country n how it really looks like.
From what I understand the nitrites com into play slower with the salt only. if the bacon is left to age a couple of weeks it might make a difference. I am thinking this might be the case since adding the pink cure is like instant nitrates instead of the natural salt converting to nitrites over time. Just a theory .
I will be experimenting more David. I am playing with some Guanciale that I am curing with no nitrites and will let this age for several weeks. I know that Parma ham is made without nitrites and they still obtain an amazing rosey colour and an unrivalled texture. This is an extremely interesting topic that's going to give me hours of research! Have you made any cured products at home?
@@CulinaryExploration I hope you have filmed that. I'm thinking about making guancale at home and would love to see how you do it
Hey Lee, I have been experimenting with the recipe. I am nearly happy with it. The process takes some time so it's not possible to produce the video quickly. Stay tuned, it will be here late in the year
wtf. Botulism only affect USA? because here in eastern europe our parents and grandparents cure the meat with no "pink salt" and i never heard someone to have a problem. Also here is very very difficult to procure this salt. under any circumstances u cant find pure like what you have #1 and #2 .. in the best way you can get a mix of regular salt and added 0.5% Sodium Nitrite..
Also, this bacteria is not dangerous only if you eat meat raw? once you fry your bacon, this bacteria (assuming is present) is not destroyed?
One more think.. what is the purpose of sugar ? Did you ever try to cure your meat without sugar? Add just 2%salt, and spices .. you will be surprised..
And the remark "with pink salt is like bacon is supposed to be" is very stupid! .. No, is not supposed to be like that ... big companies teach you to eat that crap, but that isn't normal ...
I've got a slab in the fridge right now (day 5) with no pink salt because i wanted to try it out. This is my first time. Hope i did it right... Lol. I'm going to try with nitrites next, wish me luck!
Awesome! Let me know how you get on and what you think about the comparisons!
Do you recall how it turned out?
I've got some in the fridge for 5 days no nitrates for my first time too
How long can you leave the meat curing before it goes bad?
We did a cure, the meat in air-tight bags within a water proof plastic container, leaving the meat for around 3 weeks and it all went bad.
(We were taking 2 bags out at a time as that was all we had space for within the fridge)
Was this just due to the time left or could there be other reasons?
Bacon with nitrate tastes more like ham bacon with out nitrate just tastes like salted pork. Does it make sense?
Smoking might help improve the no nitrite bacon. Or making it peppered bacon.
i heard the reason why sodium nitrate is used is to give meat a pink color but its also a carcinogen.
I rarely eat bacon, so can't claim any knowledge of the difference. However, I've always thought that the sole role of sodium nitrite was as a preservative.
How much nitrite to use in 1KG of chicken?
Not sure whether you've updated the process or had anyone else say this, but a version of the no-nitrite version I've heard of involves much larger salt crystals and making sure the meat does not sit in the water that drains off it during the curing process. Very coarse salt, in other words (e.g., Himalayan Sea Salt) and either regularly draining the off water or storing in something with holes at the bottom and a vessel underneath (preventing one's fridge from getting salty pork water all over it) are how I've seen it done. Would be interested to know whether you've ever tried or considered this method. Thanks.
Sorry. I should mention--because I didn't directly say it--that this all is in service of the final product not coming out nearly as salty as otherwise. That, at least, is the claim. I have yet to try it myself, but anticipate doing so in near future. Thanks for the ❤️ and right back at 'ya! 😁
Kosher salt is what is used. It is course than table salt which is possibly ionized.
I'm a little bothered using nitrate because of what I read in recent years that it can cause cancer. But not sure if this is really true and if it is, I wanted to know if there is just a specific amount of nitrate to ingest to cause cancer, or does it accumulate through years of consumption until it leads or causes CA? :(
The nitrate scare is not true. But, first thing first - sodium nitrite is poisonous in small amounts. It only takes 4 grams for an adult-sized person to die. With that out the way, keep in mind, that vegetables, such as celery and beet, contain a lot of nitrates, which are reduced by the bacteria in our gut into nitrites. So, you get about 100x more nitrites via vegetable than from any hams or sausages. These "natural" nitrites then are secreted in our own saliva, so you're literally swallowing nitrites every minute. Do nitrites cause cancer? The short answer - no. What do cause cancer are nitrite-protein remnants, called nitrosamines (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrosamine). They form when you heat proteins, treated with nitrites, to a very high temperature. So, don't scorch your food, and you'll be fine. (Scorched foot tastes horrible anyway).
What about Celery Juice Powder (Veg-Cure 508) instead of Instacure #1
Its the same, in many cases you end up with more Nitrites from the celery.
Can I use saltpeter instead of instacure? Will it change anything in the process?
what is you used a smoke infuser to the non nitrate? curious if it would make it more bacon like
New subscriber - great informative videos
Just tried your recipe mate so fingers crossed it comes out good in 9 days 🤞🤞
Awesome bud, let me know how you get on
@@CulinaryExploration you’re a bloody legend mate!! I’m an Australian and I loved the English bacon when I was there and now thanks to you I can enjoy it here! You bloody ripper 🍻🍻
@@lukeporter1870 That's awesome man. I've got some more videos coming on bacon, different ways of curing and cooking, plus what I think is the best bacon Ive ever eaten... I'll leave you with that thought lol, I hope to get the vids sorted in the next couple of months. Great to have someone in Australia making use of my recipes!
@@CulinaryExploration I look forward to seeing it mate, I’m gonna give your crumpets a go next
I used Morton’s quick tender cure for my first try at bacon it’s not pink but is a curing salt tasted good to me.
Morton Tender Quick mix contains salt, the main preserving agent; sugar, both sodium nitrate and sodium nitrite, curing agents that also contribute to development of color and flavor; and propylene glycol to keep the mixture uniform.
See i wish i paid attention the first time, when i went to get the nitrate salt it come out loads cheaper to get a big bucket, so i got 10kg of the stuff. Should be able to make an industrial batch for the next 10 years in Germany lol, I might make my own shop
All just gone in the fridge, ill report back my opinion when i tried it ;)
Great video. Thanks so much.
smoke it, that would probably solve the color and flavor issue
When you get dopey eyes after tasting a nitrite bacon you know what the winner is lol
Don’t you have to bake it - at a low temp maybe - before using it?
As a strict carnivore I cringe at adding sugar. That’s why I make my own. Otherwise I can just buy is without all of the work and actually would be cheaper
Ex bacon butcher here...There's also collar bacon (horrible!) And oyster cut, longback, middlecut etc.....shops don't sell those cuts (rashers) any more and no one leaves the rind on...sacrilige! .... all heil the saltpetre....
Greatly appreciated !!! thank you....
You are welcome!
What ideal temp I fridge pls ?
That's the tiniest pencil I've ever seen anybody use!😄
for me the best is the no cure bacon all natural ingredients can be use and easy to find it especially on market they can but it
its all about what are you used to , and psychology . the pink bacon looks better there is no way of denying that , BUT i am lucky enough to have grown up on natural old fashioned home made bacon , which used traditional table salt to cure and i much prefer the taste of that to the mass produced factory sodium nitrite cured type . its all in our head , but knowing about the carcinogenic properties of the nitrates i am not eating that stuff anymore .
Thanks for the side by side! I was considering not using the curing salt on my next bacon but I'm second guessing that now. Appreciate it! Sub from me 👍
I have cured bacon at home without the cure, I agree with your analysis. Have you tried the wet cure?.
I have actually. I wet brined a cut of pork neck to make a Christmas ham over the holiday. As I had a big container I popped in a big piece of belly. When it had cured I found it took on a lot of water (didn't cook so well in the pan) so I popped it in a zip lock and cooked it sous vide at around 60c. This pushed a lot of the water out and made crisping up in the pan a breeze. What's your favourite way? Cheers, Phil
@@CulinaryExploration I can see where you would have water issues there. I put my side of pig in a wine vat we have with 15 litres of tap water, 10 cups of rock salt and 7 cups of brown sugar, bring it to the boil and let it cool once all the ingredients are well mixed and dissolved. Then in with the pig side for 5 days making sure all sides are well covered. Then out and rinse and placed in our walk in fridge for 20 days, after that I take out the belly and back bacon and smoke them. I'm lucky enough to have a share in a walk in fridge as part of a hunting team, we have the facilities here in the bush and hunt Sambar deer and hog. In the UK maybe use the bath tub then instead of a walk in why not hang the beast in a fabricated bug proof box and hang her from the highest branch you can find? Love the vids BTW. Cheers Moose.
Don't know how my wife would feel about me taking over the bath tub for five days or so LOLOL - I tend to do smaller cuts in large container in a spare fridge, then I turn that fridge into the drying space. I wouldn't mind trying an air dried ham one day. Cheers for stopping by Moose. Take care, Phil
Thanks for the video. It's true you cannot get away from it tasting like salted pork instead of that bacon flavour needed to satisfy the bacon receptors in the brain. I have a loin in the fridge at the moment EQ with 2% pepper. I find the pepper is a good media to spread the cure. Unlike you though i just leave it on a rack and not in a bag. Then hang in my pantry for 24hrs, into a cardboard box to smoke for 4hrs and then time to enjoy. Keep up the bacon brotherhood.
What difference do you find with curing on a rack and not in a bag? Do you find it begins to loose moisture quicker? I may try this method so if you could give me a little incite id be grateful!
@@CulinaryExploration well for me I am aiming dry cured bacon so logically i dont want it sitting in liquid for a week. Just be careful because i have a dedicated fridge in the garage that just does bacon so as not to get off flavours from random food. Maybe thats when the bag is good if it is with other food. Hey just had an idea. Why dont you do a video of bag vs rack? That way you could compare the textures at different days.
I've got a dedicated fridge for my meaty projects so no worries. I'll try the dry cure out after the pancetta has finished. If I can get an appreciable difference then I'll look at how the video could work. I am really pleased with the pancetta, I blended the spice coating to compliment my carbonara, it's awesome. Really good to chat, love connecting with likeminded people.
@@CulinaryExploration Good man. Pancetta for your carbonara = Winning in life.
@@CulinaryExploration I'm with you Philip, in keeping the meat being cured in the bag. The same applies to curing fish. As you know, the salt and sugar extract moisture from the meat; the idea is not to just remove the moisture from the meat, but to also cure it. I usually leave the meat or fish in contact with its juices, in a bag with the air removed and turn the meat over every 24 hours, in order for the cure to penetrate the meat from all sides; I do this for about 1 week. After that, I begin the moisture extraction process, in order to achieve the results that I am aiming for. I have cured fish by this method, for 6 weeks, without the need to rinse the final product. If you start off with the correct quantity of salt, per kilogram of meat, it will never be too salty, regardless of how long the curing process takes. I hope this helps. Greetings from Australia
ho much instacure 1 do you use for every kilo of meat and can you use insstacure 2 instead
Hey, the percentages are listed int he video description
He didn't smoke it its not bacon just salted pork belly
Jesus your hands are HUGE! you can barely grip that pencil.
Wasn’t the best choice in the world Joe!
🤣
Great video!
I would rather have natural color than artificial color and chemicals. It takes time for our bodies to adjust to proper flavor from natural ingredients. Bacon made with chemicals is not Bacon!