Brine
From Cookipedia
(Redirected from Dry salting)
Brine is water saturated or nearly saturated with salt.
It is used (now less popular than historically) to preserve vegetables, fish, and meat, in a process known as brining. Brine is also commonly used to flavour and mature certain cheeses. As a rough guide, use the following salt to water levels to obtain the desired concentrate ratios:
- 16% brine: 160 ml (10.5 level tablespoons) salt to 1 litre of water.
- 18% brine: 180 ml (12 level tablespoons) salt to 1 litre of water.
- 20% brine: 200 ml (13 level tablespoons) salt to 1 litre of water.
- 30% brine: 300 ml salt to 1 litre of water (etc.)
Dry salting cheese
2% salt to weight of curd (eg: 20 g per kilo of curd)
See also
- The best roast chicken, ever! (brined)
- Chinese beer can chicken (brined)
- Bacon#Dry cured bacon vs brine cured bacon
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