May 19th 2008

In praise of the metric system

9:43 AM

I love the metric system. It makes cooking so much easier. Yesterday I wanted to brine some shrimp. Normally I'm a big fan of Alton Brown's Good Eats, so I quickly found his brine recipe for shrimp. Here it is:

1/4 cup kosher salt
1/4 cup sugar
1 cup water
2 cups ice

This recipe makes enough brine for over a pound of shrimp and I'm not doing that much, so I want to cut it down, but how do I do that? Also, how exactly does one measure 2 cups of ice? Is it cubed, crushed, etc? Also, what kind of kosher salt are we talking about. Diamond Crystal is about half as dense as Morton's. So 1/4 cup of Morton's would be 1/2 cup of Diamond Crystal. Do you see my confusion?

Instead I pulled out Charcuterie and found the basic brine recipe:

4 liters of water
225 grams salt
125 grams of sugar

What makes this recipe so great is that 4 liters of water just so happens to be 4000 grams of water. So out comes the scale. I can quickly deduce that even one liter of water would be more than enough brine. So lets just divide that recipe by 5:

800g water
45g salt
25g sugar

Wasn't that easy? I didn't even need a calculator.

Kathrine Said:
May 19th 2008 10:20 AM
Hooray! A grouchy post! It's been so long!

svott Said:
May 22nd 2008 9:46 PM
I'm trying to make the switch to the metric system. My thermometers read degrees Celsius, I speak of distances in meters. Decimalised units of measurement just make more sense--and it's easier to communicate with the rest of the world.

Let's start the revolution.

Andrew Said:
May 27th 2008 10:56 AM
My car gets 604,000 rods to the hogshead. I like to pull out that fact when someone doesn't want to use metric.

Thom Said:
May 29th 2008 11:22 AM
I think it would be easy to make the conversion. I've even come up with the ad campaign for a class. It has to do with the fact that suddenly you're allowed to drive faster, you weigh less, and you get to eat more.

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