Calculate the perfect brine ratio for any meat. Get exact salt, sugar, and water quantities for wet and dry brining poultry, pork, and more.
Brining is one of the most effective techniques for producing juicy, flavorful meat. By soaking meat in a saltwater solution — or rubbing it with salt for dry brining — you fundamentally change the protein structure, allowing the meat to absorb and retain more moisture during cooking. A properly brined turkey can retain up to 10-15% more moisture than an unbrined one, which is the difference between a legendarily juicy bird and a dry disappointment.
The key to successful brining is the salt-to-water ratio. Too little salt and the brine won't penetrate effectively; too much salt and your meat becomes unpleasantly salty. The standard ratio for a basic wet brine is 1 cup of kosher salt per gallon of water (roughly a 6% solution by weight), but optimal concentrations vary by protein type and cut thickness.
This calculator handles both wet and dry brining, adjusting salt quantities based on the type and weight of your meat, your preferred salt type (kosher, table, or sea salt — they measure differently!), and optional additions like sugar and aromatics. Whether you're brining a Thanksgiving turkey or a weeknight batch of chicken breasts, you'll get precise measurements for perfect results every time.
Getting the brine ratio wrong can ruin an expensive cut of meat. This calculator eliminates guesswork by providing exact measurements for your specific protein, salt type, and preferred concentration level. Keep these notes focused on your operational context. Tie the context to the calculator’s intended domain. Use this clarification to avoid ambiguous interpretation. Align this note with review checkpoints.
Wet Brine: Water (gallons) = Meat Weight (lbs) × 0.5. Salt (cups kosher) = Water (gallons) × Concentration Factor. Standard concentration = 1 cup kosher salt per gallon (6% by weight). Sugar (optional) = Salt amount × 0.5. Dry Brine: Salt (tsp kosher per lb) = 1 tsp per pound of meat. Salt type conversion: 1 cup kosher = 0.5 cup table salt = 0.75 cup fine sea salt.
Result: 7 gallons water, 7 cups kosher salt, 3.5 cups sugar
For a 14 lb turkey: 14 × 0.5 = 7 gallons of water needed. At standard concentration: 7 gal × 1 cup/gal = 7 cups kosher salt. Sugar is half the salt: 3.5 cups. Brine for 12-24 hours refrigerated.
**Wet brining** is ideal when you want maximum moisture retention, especially for lean cuts that tend to dry out (turkey breast, chicken breast, pork loin). The meat absorbs the saltwater solution, increasing its weight by 6-8%. However, wet brining requires a large container and fridge space, and can make poultry skin soggy unless you air-dry afterward. **Dry brining** is simpler — just rub salt on the meat and refrigerate uncovered. It produces crispier skin, concentrates flavor rather than diluting it, and requires no special container. Dry brining is preferred for steaks, bone-in poultry, and anytime crispy skin is the goal.
Brining works through osmosis and diffusion. Initially, the salt draws moisture out of the meat's surface cells. Then, as the salt concentration equalizes, the salty liquid is reabsorbed along with the dissolved salt. The salt denatures (unwinds) the meat proteins, creating gaps that trap water. During cooking, a brined piece of meat loses less moisture because the proteins can't contract as tightly. This is why brined meat stays juicier even if slightly overcooked — it has a larger margin for error.
The most frequent mistake is **not converting between salt types**. A recipe calling for 1 cup of table salt produces an incredibly salty brine if you use 1 cup of kosher salt instead — or vice versa. Always check which salt the recipe specifies. Other mistakes include brining in a warm environment (dangerous!), using a brine that wasn't fully cooled (partially cooks the meat surface), and forgetting to rinse and pat dry before cooking. Also, never brine pre-brined or kosher-labeled poultry that's already been salted during processing.
The standard ratio is 1 cup of Diamond Crystal kosher salt per gallon of water (about 6% by weight). For table salt, use ½ cup per gallon since it's denser.
Wet brine a turkey for 12-24 hours. A 12 lb turkey needs about 12 hours; larger birds up to 24. Never exceed 24 hours or the texture becomes mushy.
Wet brining submerges meat in saltwater, adding moisture and flavor. Dry brining rubs salt directly on the meat, drawing out moisture then reabsorbing it. Dry brining produces crispier skin and requires no container.
Sugar is optional but recommended. It balances the saltiness, helps with browning (Maillard reaction), and adds subtle sweetness. Use brown sugar for richer flavor.
Yes. Over-brining makes meat mushy and overly salty. Follow recommended times: chicken breasts 1-2 hours, whole chicken 4-12 hours, turkey 12-24 hours, pork chops 2-4 hours.
No! Kosher salt has larger crystals and is less dense. 1 cup of Diamond Crystal kosher salt ≈ ½ cup table salt ≈ ¾ cup Morton kosher. Always convert when substituting.