luvmesump3pp3rz said:
i think if you are a baker and use their "math" and are used to it that is fine for you. you can do the same with grams. i literally never see recipes online that use percentages. if it works for you that`s great. the first response you got in this thread nailed it. best answer. i`m not trying to dis you but i couldn`t find 11.4 % on my measuring cup or on my scale.
The biggest issue, to me, is that simply measuring by grams doesn't work for production. A recipe can end up with 12.5 bottles of product. That 1/2 bottle is just "waste".
So, let me see if I can explain.
If I have a recipe that is
200g peppers
300g vinegar
10g garlic
20g salt
Seasonings (1g each, but for simplicity, we won't measure).
That gives us a total of 530g. Maybe 535g after spices, but lets say 530g.
After cooking for 20 minutes and straining I get 1.5 bottles (just did this recipe this afternoon)
Well, for scaling to bottle size we have a problem. From 530g, I got one bottle that weighs (after taring) 150g. I'm losing about half my liquid volume in processing. Which is fine, but good to know.
So, my bottle has 150g of total product. Now I can scale up to 12 bottles, but the amounts from the recipe made 1.5 bottles. Instead of vague guestimates, I can convert to percentages.
The percentage
should hold true regardless the mass. That means the end recipe give us:
Peppers 37.8%
Vinegar 56.6%
Garlic 1.9% (probably round off to 2%)
Salt. 3.8%
So, if I have a bottle that is 150g product, but I need to make 100 cases, or 1200 bottles, all I have to do to scale is:
1200 * 150 = 180,000
I need 180,000g product to fill 100 cases.
Ok, so I know my target amount. I can't just take 30g peppers and multiply that out because it nets me not-one-bottle of product.
So, 100 cases. When calculated out from percentage we get:
Peppers 68,040g
Vinegar 101,880g
Garlic 3,429g
Salt 6,840g
That should net me the correct mass of product to fill 1200 bottles after cooking.
You may not find it on your scale, and you may not agree with the method, but that's no reason to be continuously snide about it. If you have
constructive criticism of the method, I would be happy to hear it and adjust the idea accordingly.
Admittedly, this does not account for evaporation rates due to cooking, absorption from spices, or loss from straining.
I welcome any critique that goes beyond "I can't measure a percentage" because you can, but choose not to.