Grill smoking pork ham hot smoked bacon

How to Cure Ham so it’s Not Salty

Writer / Enthusiast / Meat Curer / Forager / Harvester | About Tom

For decades, immersed in studying, working, learning, and teaching in the craft of meat curing, now sharing his passion with you through eat cured meat online resource.

(Last Updated On: January 17, 2024)

The question is – how to avoid the ham being too salty; because after brine curing or wet brining the ham you want the result to be perfect. Buying a big chunk of ham or using a precious piece from a pig you’ve reared – it’s a beautiful thing!

It should not be too salty to be enjoyed.

This blog eatcuredmeat.com is all about making and eating cured meat, and over the years I’ve written a ton about how to brine( also called pickling) the ham.

All hams taste differently – confused? – but using this method below you are guaranteed to not get an overly salty ham.

Using an equilibrium wet brine or pickle with 1-2% salt concentration will not let the ham get too much salt to inhibit it. A brine injector needle will make sure the cure in the ham is properly dispersed.

Specifically, this is for when you are cooking the ham with or without smoke. Only for a dried ham that is preserved and has weight loss, you would need a much higher salt concentration.

Different types of cured hams

We are talking mainly about wet brined and pressed not dry curing (wet vs dry curing article I wrote) which is drying without cooking (which a lot of this site is about though!).

The equilibrium brine calculation (calculation link for bacon/ham) is a percentage of salt to the total weight of the meat plus the water.

I know this sounds complicated so I created an equilibrium curing calculator – this tool is used to work out how much salt to use.

10lb / 5kg Ham = 5000g

1.5% salt

0.015 x (5,000+4000) = 135 grams of salt in 4 Liters of Water (use metric it’s way easier to calculate)

note. 4000ml of water = 4000 grams weight

Then the question is, how long to leave it in the brine. I would always advise getting a meat injection syringe. An injector means you are going to force that brine into the meat, otherwise, you have to wait for some time for the brine to penetrate.

Without this injector, it only affects the very outside of the meat.

Guide to The Perfect Salt-Cured Ham: To get that perfect salt-cured ham, there is one trick I have found that works. Well, let’s talk about two tricks.

How to Cure Ham So it’s Not Too Salty

Details about:

1) Equilibrium Wet Brining
2) Meat Syringe Injection

Equilibrium Wet Brining

Smoked berkshire ham boneless 1s 5903
Wet Brined and Super Moist Ham!

It’s the key, because you end up choosing the level of saltiness, but at the same time, you can perform a light cure on the ham.

Equilibrium wet brining takes time, about one week per 1-inch thickness of meat (most pork hams are 3-10 inches, I guess).

What is achieved here is the right amount of salt to season the meat, and also allowing the salt to bind to the meat muscles inside.

Therefore, the water-binding holds the moisture in, so you have a much more juicy moist ham as an end-product. It really is about holding the moisture on the surface, so that when it cooks, it won’t dry out on the outside.

Meat Syringe Injection

This is especially important: for a cut of pork with a bone in it, and using a meat syringe, the salt is binding throughout the meat with these holes.

I also use it with boneless hams.

Water-binding will occur so that the moisture in the meat is ‘held’ in by the salt.

Most meat like pork is made up of around 60-70% water (like our bodies actually). The outcome of the water binding is a juicy/moist cooked ham!

After injecting your pork with equilibrium wet curing and a week in the fridge, you’re ready for the next step, which is forming the pellicle before smoking (if you are smoking, or just cook it in the oven).

If you’re not smoking and indirectly cooking the meat at the same time, then you don’t have to worry about the pellicle, it just means that the smoked vapor around the meat when it’s cooking adheres to the meat better = meaning more smoking flavor.

If you want to read about pellicle formation I wrote all about it here.

Why Wet Brining Ham is Better Than Dry Curing

If you’re using a wet brining/pickling type method, you’re locking the moisture of the meat.

As mentioned above, meat is 70% water and generally 20% protein.

Dry curing ham with a 1% equilibrium cure will mean the salt is drawn into the meat and held near the surface.

It won’t go deep like using a meat injection syringe for extra juiciness. But it does hold some moisture on the surface of the meat whilst cooking.

Why is Ham too Salty?

Saturation brining is about the time in the cure, the ‘degree’ of the brine represents the higher levels of salt diluted in it.

I want to touch on this since it’s the most common form of ‘brining’ meat. In essence, it’s placing meat in a saltwater solution for a set amount of time.

Here is a link to a table highlighting some of the commercial wet brine (saturation) levels. This is not the target area of the topic but I thought I would put it in here for anyone interested.

The oBé (oBaumé) scale was devised to correlate to the percentage concentration (% w/w) of a brine solution (salt in water).

http://www.monashscientific.com.au/Baume.htm

Using this traditional method of brining, you end up guessing the amount of salt penetration happening because there are other factors at hand.

Such as:

  • time in brine
  • fat to meat ratio
  • the sinew
  • muscle structure
  • the temperature of the water
  • amount of salt

I’ve done seafish for 12 minutes in an 80-degree brine, the fillets were only about 1/2 inch thick. It took about 40 minutes to dilute a rather large amount of salt!

As you can imagine all of these factors will vary the result – just look at the piece of pork that you’re using there will be variations each time. Hence Equilibrium Curing and Brining is the winner!

Why is Sugar Added to a Ham

I used to think sugar had some preserving effect a few decades ago when I started my meat curing adventure.

Sugar doesn’t have any preservation effect on the meat. It’s commonly used in brine recipes. I use it quite often to add a bit more flavor.

Just like apples or pineapple, sugar is a natural companion to pork and enhances the flavor. I find, sometimes, it’s gone a little overboard with the amount of sugar that is put into ham or bacon but that’s just my personal opinion. In terms of equilibrium brine percentage, I would use a maximum of 0.5% sugar in most of my curing/brining.

Why Cure a Ham with Salt

The main benefit when cooking/smoking ham is to get that salt brine in to hold in the moisture.

I do this by brining wild turkey (that I hunt ) which needs that moisture.

Without fat to render down and create a more juicy type of meat – brining is an excellent way of keeping things juicy for lean game meat.

The key again, if you’re cooking or hot smoking until it’s cooked, is to have a level of salt penetration that holds the moisture in during the cooking process.

Should I Soak a Ham Before Cooking?

If the ham is too salty, soaking in tap water for 30-60 minutes may get rid of some of the salt from the meat.

Then cut a piece off and fry it up to test the salt level. I’ve also done this with salmon after I have traditionally salt-cured it (not equilibrium-cured/brined) to make something like gravlax. Salmon is thinner meat that’s not as dense, the salt leaches out faster.

Writer / Enthusiast / Meat Curer / Forager / Harvester | About Tom

For decades, immersed in studying, working, learning, and teaching in the craft of meat curing, now sharing his passion with you through eat cured meat online resource.

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Comments

  1. Hi Tom, I Just found your site, I will have a lot of reading to do ….. lol
    Been making dry-cured bacon for years, my greek father taught me, going to wet cure a small ham (1st attempt) using the EQ method but the liquid does not cover the meat, is this normal, obviously, I will need to turn the piece daily while waiting for your reply.
    All the best
    Stylianos

    1. Author

      Hey, yes you really want full coverage. I put meat in a container and then fill water around it. Then measure the water and do the eq brining calcs (calc on site at top). You have to play around with the % on my calc to equal what weight you have recorded.
      Another option is injection of the brine to make sure the center is cured.
      Hope that helps,!
      T

  2. Yes that makes a lot more sense, as I only saw your reply today, I’ve been turning/shaking the container, I’ll cook it tomorrow and see how it turns out.
    Cheers

  3. Hi Tom I gave it a soak in cold water for a couple of hours and simmered it for an hour ……. it is blooming handsome a little on the dry side but the flavour is perfect, maybe I should have left it in its cooking liquid overnight, oh I use the liquid to make a Thai lentil curry 🙂

  4. Is 1.5% eq brining for hams that cook directly on the smoker? For those that are boiled in water k assume don’t you need to do a 3% eq brine to compensate for the water that leaches into the boiling liquid?

    1. Author

      Not sure boiling is anther parameter I don’t do, Don’t know what your making. yes boiling with fresh water removes salted meats. For simmered pastrami i prefer to steam.

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