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Salt-cured meat - Definition and Overview |
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Salt-cured meat or salted meat, for example ham, bacon or kippered herring, is meat or fish preserved or cured by salt or brine. Salt beef was a stable of the diet of the British navy. Salted meat and fish are commonly eaten as a staple of the diet in North Africa, Southern China and in the Arctic where they are associated with nasopharyngeal cancer caused by infection by the Epstein-Barr Virus. One study hypothesizes that a covector is anaerobic bacteria found in salted fish, Article in The Scientist Volume 13, No. 6:1, Mar. 15, 1999 (registration required) (http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1999/mar/watanabe_p1_990315.html).
Salt and sugar inhibit the growth of microorganisms by drawning water out of microbial cells by osmosis. Concentrations of salt up to 20% are required to kill most species of bacteria. Smoking adds chemicals that reduce the concentration of salt required.
See also Curing
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Example Usage of Salt-cured |
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jimcarmin: "Ham salt cured and earth-red/sliced with the fat hanging on/yellow sunshine on a white plate"-Sean Hill @ How a Poem... http://bit.ly/ROVIk |
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oceanchick99: dr wanted me to eat beef but i can't. just can't. so i found free range, no hormone, ham is salt cured and sooo salty i can't taste meat. |
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thtlntdmrhttn: RT @miss_om: JAPAZ! Round 1: Salt cured yellowfin, olive oil roasted almonds. http://twitpic.com/sima8 |
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