🥩 Pastrami Brine Calculator
Enter your meat weight to get exact brine ingredient amounts for a perfect cure
| Brine Type | Salt % | Cure Time | Flavor Profile | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Light Immersion | 3–4% | 5–7 days | Mild, subtle | Leaner cuts |
| Standard Immersion | 5–6% | 7–10 days | Classic deli flavor | Brisket flat |
| Strong Immersion | 7–8% | 10–14 days | Firm, salty | Thick cuts |
| Equilibrium Cure | 2.5% | 5–7 days | Precise, even | Any cut |
| Salt Type | 1 tbsp wt. | 1 cup wt. |
|---|---|---|
| Morton Kosher | 15g (0.53 oz) | 240g (8.5 oz) |
| Diamond Crystal | 8g (0.28 oz) | 128g (4.5 oz) |
| Fine Sea Salt | 18g (0.63 oz) | 288g (10.1 oz) |
| Pickling Salt | 19g (0.67 oz) | 304g (10.7 oz) |
| Pink Salt #1 | Meat Weight | Amount Needed |
|---|---|---|
| Rule: 0.25% | 1 lb (454g) | 1.1g |
| of meat weight | 2 lb (907g) | 2.3g |
| 5 lb (2268g) | 5.7g | |
| 10 lb (4536g) | 11.3g |
| Meat Weight (lb) | Water 1:1 (cups) | Water 1:1 (liters) | Water 1.5:1 (cups) | Water 1.5:1 (liters) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 lb | 2 cups | 0.47 L | 3 cups | 0.71 L |
| 2 lb | 4 cups | 0.95 L | 6 cups | 1.42 L |
| 3 lb | 6 cups | 1.42 L | 9 cups | 2.13 L |
| 5 lb | 10 cups | 2.37 L | 15 cups | 3.55 L |
| 7 lb | 14 cups | 3.31 L | 21 cups | 4.97 L |
| 10 lb | 20 cups | 4.73 L | 30 cups | 7.10 L |
Pastrami is made from beef, usually from the brisket, that one runs with spices in brine, later smoked and roasted. It originally served to preserve the meat on a long-term basis. First one salts the brisket in the brine later one smokes the meat and commonly roasts it until ready.
The right brine is truly the secret for good homemade pastrami. Everything in the taste depends on that brine.
How to Make and Use Brine for Pastrami
To prepare the brine, one mixes water with kosher salt, white sugar, brown sugar, pink curing salt, pickling spice and mustard seeds in a big jar. Cook this on medium-high heat, stirring now and again, until the salts and sugars fully dissolve. One can also slowly warm the mix until boiling softly and cook it for around one hour without letting it boil strongly, later cool in the kitchen and quickly freeze.
The next day one strains the brine before usage.
A good recipe for brine in around one gallon uses one and half cups kosher salt, three quarters of cups brown sugar, quarter of cup pink curing salt like Prague Powder number one, cracked black peppers, cracked coriander seeds, bay leaves and smashed garlic cloves. Also mixes for pickling work well. The pickling spice of McCormick carries, for instance, cinnamon, pimento, mustard seed, coriander, bay leaves, ginger, clove, red pepper, black pepper, cardamom and mace.
When the brine is ready, one pours it over the meat to cover it. If needed, one weighs the meat with a plate or a water bag, so that it stays entirely covered. Later one covers the pots and lays them in the refrigerator.
The thyme for brining ranges a lot. Some recipes require five days, others extend to ten days or even three weeks. For turkey pastrami only two to three days in the brine is enough.
Brining for seven days gives also good results.
The amount of salt is very important. A solution with 2.5 percent of salt in the brine works well. Too much salt together with long time in the brine results in over-salted meat.
When using pre-cooked brisket, one must remove a bit of the inner brine, because that is built in. After the run, one rinses the meat well and avoids adding more salty aids, because the brine already makes it quite salty. Some cooks desalt the meat twice before applying the rub.
A bit of liquid from the meat mixes with the brine, and proteins in that liquid can clump, which makes the brine look weird. If it still smells fine, the meat stays good. After the brining, one rubs the meat with a spicy mix and cooks it.
One way is smoking at 250 degrees for eight hours, later roasting in the oven at 325 degrees for two and half additional hours. Not many pros themselves run and cut their own pastrami, because of the long and hard process. Even so simple homemade variants makeit fairly easy with little effort.
