Master Blaster
40 Cal
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2016
- Messages
- 143
- Reaction score
- 276
ӢSaltpeter (potassium nitrate), a natural contaminant of salt, contributed historically to the pinkish-red color in salted meats
ӢNitric oxide, derived from nitrate/nitrite reduction, when combined with myoglobin produces as the color pigment in cured meat products
ӢNitrite prevents sporulation of Clostridium boutlinum in cured meats
”¢In 1925, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) approved nitrite’s use in curing brines and formulas at a maximum ingoing level of 200 ppm
ӢResidual nitrite declined in cured meats from 1930s to 1970s and has remained low since the 1980s mitigating the formation of N-nitrosamines
ӢUSDA regulations restrict ingoing levels of nitrite and nitrate (if allowed) to specific levels in meat product categories
”¢Residual nitrite levels in conventional and “organic” cured meats is
ӢNitric oxide, derived from nitrate/nitrite reduction, when combined with myoglobin produces as the color pigment in cured meat products
ӢNitrite prevents sporulation of Clostridium boutlinum in cured meats
”¢In 1925, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) approved nitrite’s use in curing brines and formulas at a maximum ingoing level of 200 ppm
ӢResidual nitrite declined in cured meats from 1930s to 1970s and has remained low since the 1980s mitigating the formation of N-nitrosamines
ӢUSDA regulations restrict ingoing levels of nitrite and nitrate (if allowed) to specific levels in meat product categories
”¢Residual nitrite levels in conventional and “organic” cured meats is