The Curesmith Wizard

Don’t know where to start? Use The Curesmith Wizard to guide you along the way!

Disclaimer: Please read the additional information provided below the calculator carefully before proceeding, including the health and safety disclaimer. 

Health & Safety Disclaimer

By using any recipe on The Curesmith you automatically agree to our terms and accept that The Curesmith cannot be held liable for any illness, injury, loss or damage arising from its use. Click to read the full disclaimer.

Purpose and scope

The recipes published on The Curesmith are intended for educational and informational purposes only. Meat curing, fermentation and smoking involve processes that, if carried out incorrectly, can result in products that are unsafe to eat. By using any recipe on this website you acknowledge that you do so entirely at your own risk, and you agree that The Curesmith and its authors cannot be held liable for any outcome arising from its use.

Limitation of liability

The Curesmith and its authors accept no responsibility or liability for any illness, injury, loss or damage arising from the use of these recipes, including but not limited to illness caused by improperly cured, handled or cooked meat products, errors in measurement or technique, equipment failure, or deviation from the stated method or quantities.

Nitrite and cure safety

Meat curing involves the use of nitrite salts, which must be measured accurately and used strictly according to the quantities specified. Nitrite in excessive quantities is toxic. Please ensure you understand the following before proceeding:

  • Always use a calibrated digital scale accurate to at least one gram. For smaller batches, a scale accurate to 0.1g is strongly recommended.
  • Never exceed the stated cure amounts. Never substitute cure types without recalculating.
  • Store all curing salts clearly labelled, separately from regular salt, and out of reach of children.
  • Different cure products have different nitrite concentrations. Always check your manufacturer's label and adjust quantities accordingly.

Food hygiene and cross-contamination

Raw and cured meat products must be stored, handled and prepared in a clean environment using food-safe equipment. Hands, surfaces, tools and containers must be thoroughly cleaned and where appropriate sanitised before use. Cross-contamination between raw meat and ready-to-eat products must be avoided at all times.

Temperature control

Temperature control is critical throughout all curing and smoking processes. Inadequate temperature management can allow the growth of dangerous pathogens including Clostridium botulinum, Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella and E. coli. A reliable refrigerator thermometer and a calibrated probe thermometer are essential pieces of equipment for anyone producing cured or smoked meat at home.

Uncooked cured products

Whole muscle products that are eaten without cooking, such as air-dried bresaola, coppa or prosciutto, must reach their target weight loss before consumption. Products that have not been cured and dried to the correct specification may not be safe to eat uncooked. Pancetta and guanciale cured to less than 38% weight loss must not be consumed uncooked.

Bacon and other uncooked cured products

Bacon and other uncooked cured products must be cooked thoroughly before eating. Cold smoking adds flavour and colour but does not cook the product. A cold-smoked bacon or sausage remains a raw product and must reach a safe internal temperature before it is safe to consume. For pork and beef this is 72°C / 162°F. For poultry this is 74°C / 165°F.

When in doubt, seek professional guidance

If you are unsure about any aspect of the curing, smoking or fermentation process, we strongly encourage you to seek formal training or guidance from a qualified food safety professional before proceeding. The information on this website is not a substitute for proper food safety education and training.

Commercial production

These recipes are produced for home and small-scale producers. They are not intended for commercial food production. Commercial meat processing is subject to regulatory requirements that vary by country and jurisdiction. If you intend to produce cured or smoked products for sale, you must ensure full compliance with all applicable food safety regulations in your region.

The Curesmith Wizard

Your guided companion to curing, step by step.

Where are you on your curing journey?

Choose the option that best describes you. You can always change your level later. If you are unsure, starting as "New to Curing" is a great place to begin.

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Your curing journey starts here

Welcome! Below you will find our recommended starter recipes, grouped into three progressive stages. Each stage builds on the last, so we suggest working through them in order.

Recipes are listed in suggested order from easiest to more advanced. You are free to pick any recipe at any time, but working through them in sequence will help build your skills and confidence naturally.
Stage 1

Wet brined, pickled and simple cures

Entry-level techniques with minimal equipment. Results in a few days. No nitrate cure required.

Stage 2

First real dry curing

Your first step into true dry curing. Results in one to two weeks. Introduces Cure #1 for food safety.

Stage 3

Whole muscle short cure

Small whole-muscle cures that finish in one to two weeks. The foundation for everything that follows.

Ready for more? Once you have a few Stage 1--3 cures under your belt, try Learning the Craft to explore cold smoking, fresh sausages and longer whole-muscle cures.
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Building on the basics

You have moved beyond simple cures and are ready for more variety. Below you will find recipes that introduce cold smoking, sausage making, and longer whole-muscle cures.

Recipes are listed in suggested order from easiest to more advanced. You are free to pick any recipe at any time, but working through them in sequence will help build your skills and confidence naturally.
Stage 4

Introduction to cold smoking

Your first taste of cold smoking. Pre-cured products gently smoked at low temperatures for added depth and shelf life.

Stage 5

Fresh sausages

Your introduction to sausage making. Fresh sausages cooked the same day, no curing required, all about getting the meat-to-fat ratio and seasoning right.

Stage 6

Smoked sausages

Sausages that combine cure, ferment and smoke. A natural progression from fresh sausages, building on what you have already learned.

Stage 7

Advanced whole muscle

Longer dry-cured whole-muscle products. A controlled curing chamber is recommended for these, and they can take weeks to months to mature.

Ready for full freedom? Once you are comfortable with these recipes, try Confident Curer for access to the full recipe library and all eleven calculators.
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You selected:
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What would you like to do?

You have access to the full Curesmith library. Choose between following one of our named recipes, or creating your own recipe from scratch with a calculator.

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The full recipe library

Every Curesmith recipe, grouped by product type. Click a category to see its recipes, then click a recipe to open it.

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What would you like to do?

You have full access to The Curesmith. Jump straight to any calculator, or browse the full recipe library.

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All Curesmith calculators

Every calculator, grouped by category. Click any category to see its calculators, then click one to open it in a new tab.

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What are you making?

Pick a category below. We will then show you the calculators that fit what you have in mind.

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Choose your calculator

Here are the calculators that fit what you are making. Click one to open it in a new tab.

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Extended Health and Safety Disclaimer

This calculator is provided as a general educational tool to assist with equilibrium curing calculations. It is not a substitute for food safety training, technical expertise or professional advice. Meat curing carries inherent risks — including spoilage, pathogen growth, incorrect curing salt use, and serious foodborne illness — if the process is not carried out correctly.

By using this calculator, you acknowledge that you are solely responsible for how you apply the information and results it produces. You must independently confirm that your ingredients, curing salts, nitrite percentages, measurements, temperatures, handling methods, packaging, equipment and storage conditions are all accurate and appropriate for your specific intended use.

Always use a precision scale. Follow strict hygiene and sanitation practices throughout. Keep meat under safe refrigeration at all times during the curing process. Never use pure nitrite or pure nitrate directly — only use approved curing premixes, and always confirm their exact composition from the manufacturer’s label before calculating or applying any cure.

Any curing time shown by this calculator is an estimate only. Actual curing time may vary depending on the thickness, shape, density, fat content, temperature control, bag sealing and other variables specific to your cut and your environment. Cure penetration, product condition and safety must always be assessed before the meat is removed from cure, dried, smoked, cooked or consumed.

Food safety laws, permitted practices and allowable nitrite limits vary by country and region. It is your responsibility to ensure that your curing process complies with the applicable laws, standards and food safety guidance where you live and work.

The Curesmith makes no warranties or guarantees regarding the safety, completeness, accuracy, legal compliance or final outcome of any product made using this calculator, and accepts no liability for any illness, injury, loss, damage or adverse result arising from its use or reliance on its output.

If you are unsure at any stage, do not proceed. Reach out to us directly at connect@thecuresmith.com and we will do our best to help.

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