I have been reading about how phosphates add so much moisture. I am unsure how much to use. For example there is a basic chicken injection on the website. It has kosher salt and chicken stock in it. If I used that recipe. Would you recommend that I put in a tsp for example. I would also like to try it in brisket and beef ribs.
I think you are better off with salt. I found that phosphates add an off taste, in my opinion. That being said, I would put in about 1 tsp per pound across the whole bird.
You are better off buying higher quality chicken, and going from there.
Actually to be most accurate, phosphates in and of themselves don't add moisture. They bind to the wall of the meat proteins and help attract moisture. They also toughen the wall of that protein to aid in moisture retention inside the protein structures.
Generally speaking, I add about a teaspoon of phosphate to a cup of injection for briskets or pork butts. As a disclaimer, that's what my little bit of research has told me. If you go with a commercial product like Butchers Phosphate, they recommend a 1/4 cup of the stuff for every 2 cups of liquid, or a little bit more than I use.
I believe in injecting (with the exception of Wagyu briskets). I believe it helps in the overall finished product, especially in the flat. Give it a try and compare it to an adjacent part of your brisket that is not injected. Good way to experiment and learn.
I do the same, especially for brisket flats and chuck roasts. Not so much for chicken breasts, as the PBC handles split chickens so nicely and the breasts are always juicy with the dry brine method.
I mix Butcher's BBQ phosphate with homemade beef broth for beef, chicken broth for pork.
I use butchers BBQ phosphates. Inject just about all proteins with the exception of fish. I make my own injection, then add 2 tablespoons of injection per cup of liquor in the injection. I just did a side by side comparison 2 weeks ago. Two yard birds of the same weight with the same sell by date one injected with my phosphate injection, the other with the same injection with the phosphates omitted. Bothe dry brined at the same time, and spun on the same rotisserie at the same time. The phosphate one was FAR superior, especially in the breasts. Much less stringy, more moisture, shrunk a lot less too. Just confirmed what I have always though based on non-side by side cooks. I'll keep injecting.
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