If you brine a chicken and then boil it in soup, how much salt, if any, will come out and go into the liquid?

If you brine a chicken and then boil it in soup, how much salt, if any, will come out and go into the liquid? - Top view of white bowl with yummy homemade noodles cooked in fresh delicious chicken broth and topped with green aromatic parsley placed on white marble table

Suppose you brine a chicken in a heavy solution e.g. 10% saline. Suppose you now boil this chicken in water which does not contain salt or contains a little salt e.g. 5g. How much of the salt, if any, will come out of the chicken and go into the soup. Will it try to equalise via osmoses and keep putting salt out until an equal concentration is present in chicken and soup or not? If it does, i take it a large amount of salt will ditribute into the soup liquid leaving the chicken less salty?



Best Answer

I'm not exactly sure why you're trying to brine then boil; you should be able to simply boil your chicken in salty stock and get plenty of salt into it. It won't take nearly as long as brining, because things happen faster in boiling water.

Assuming you boil for any significant length of time, much of the salt will indeed come out into the cooking liquid, and you'll end up with your soup approximately as salty as the chicken. (If the chicken is in large pieces, this of course only applies to the part the brining and cooking liquids can actually reach.)




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Can you boil brined chicken?

Boiling the meat in brine can give you all of the benefits of a dry brine while also reducing the amount of time you'll need to finish the meat on a grill, stovetop, or oven afterwards.

Do I need to salt chicken after brining?

You can absolutely season your meat after brining. Keep in mind that the brine is very salt-rich, so you won't need to add any extra salt. Feel free to season with your favorite dry rub after brining. You can also toss the meat with low- or no-salt liquid marinades.

How do you remove salt from brined chicken?

One way to remove salt from raw, brined chicken and other poultry is to soak it in water or buttermilk. Soaking in water helps remove the salt and leaves the chicken intact and ready for cooking. Soaking the chicken in buttermilk leeches the salt from the meat.

How much salt does meat absorb from brine?

Only about 1% of the total sodium from the brine is absorbed.



Why you should (almost) always brine your chicken




More answers regarding if you brine a chicken and then boil it in soup, how much salt, if any, will come out and go into the liquid?

Answer 2

It seems like you would season the water/stock with salt from the meat. The amount is unreliable, and would be based on cooking time, salinity of the meat, size of cut, mineral content of the water, etc.

I am not sure about meat, but a few answers regarding potatoes on a quick google search state that boiling denatures protiens and ruptures cell membranes. That means that the salt water in the meat is simply diffusing out into the normal water. At some point an equilibrium would occur. I can't remember enough chemistry to tell you whether this would happen before or after the meat finished cooking. It would follow that for cuts of beef and chicken with similar salt content by weight, you would notice a difference in salinity of the cooking liquid due to the structure/density of the meat, given all other factors were equal.

Cooking meat tightens up the protiens, which is what causes it to squeeze out the juices. The point of brining is to add extra (flavorful) juices to the meat, so it won't dry out as much at cooking time. Since you have to cook meat for a long time in water to dry it out, the problem in this question can be avoided by boiling unbrined meat, and seasoning the water as you cook. Even with a brined, salted, or pickled meat, you will still want to taste as you cook, and season to taste.

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