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CHEESE TYPE BOARDS (for Cheese Lovers and Cheese Makers) => ADJUNCT - Rennet Surface White Mold (Penicillium candidum) Ripened => Topic started by: dttorun on November 27, 2011, 02:16:37 PM

Title: Brie & Camembert - Brining vs Dry Salting
Post by: dttorun on November 27, 2011, 02:16:37 PM
I have a question regarding brining a camambert. What is the benefit of brining it instead of dry salting? It is not thick and it will not be ripened for long time. I always dry salt my cams and can try brining them but better to know why.
Thanks,
Tan
Title: Re: Brie & Camembert - Brining vs Dry Salting
Post by: linuxboy on November 27, 2011, 03:08:05 PM
Quotebut there seems to be no pattern to the two lengths.
The pattern is that thicker disks take longer to take in salt. a 125g 4"-4.25" takes proportionally less time because rate of uptake and ionic diffusion is not linear.
QuoteErr slightly on the high side, you can't really overbrine, as salt take up reduces with time.
IMHO, this is only one side of the story. It is possible to overbrine, especially with 18-22% brine. Higher fat content, higher moisture all can lead to fast salt uptake, so that any decreases with time will be so marginal as not compensate for higher initial uptake rate.
QuoteWhat is the benefit of brining it instead of dry salting?
More even pH and salt gradients, also better control of surface moisture. With salt, you draw out the moisture, it dissolves, then penetrates the cheese. The salt and pH gradients are often not too even at the surface. This is partly why salt size and dissolution rate are so important. With brining, you're done when you take them out... dry up the surface to encourage PC bloom and off they go.