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Salty tale - salt explained

In the 1920s, table salt manufacturers in the U.S. began to add iodine to their product to prevent thyroid deficiency problems in the mid-West. These days, purist (or pretentious?) foodies like their salts unrefined and in a myriad of mineral colors.

Uncommon salts

Fleur de Sel de Guérande. High in mineral content yet low in sodium. Fragrant and glittery, used by bakers on loaves, it's good in cooking for finishing.

Sel gris. Damp, grainy. Good all-rounder for cooking.

Maldon. Flaky crystals, mild, briny, best used only for finishing.

Anglesey. Like Maldon but damper, for finishing.

Balinese salt. Big crystals, subtle flavor, a crunch without salinity – a good cooking salt.

Portuguese crystal flakes. Very intense, very salty, good for finishing.

Panamanian salt. Very salty, floury texture and finish. Cooking salt, good inside a fish cavity.

Chinese Black Pepper Salt. A cooking salt good to add to a steak rub.

Italian Sale Alle Erbe. Small herb-infused grains, good to crust a roasted fish.

Korean salt. Highly salty with a strong sulfuric flavor. Use for cooking.

Japanese Lake salt. Small grains, intense, short finish. A cooking salt.

Australian Lake salt. Larger, dryer grain. Flatter flavor. For cooking and rubs.

Greek salt. Very, very salty and mineral-y fine grained cooking salt.

Himalayan Sel Rose. Dawn pink. Subtle, crunchy texture.

Hawaiian deep orange. Colored by iron oxide with a rustic flavor. Use as a colorful bed for oysters.


Janet Cam is a seasoned Washington salt collector. Read my interview with her for The Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/31/AR2005053100378.html

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Salt
Posted on Friday 05th October 2007 in Britain & Ireland, France, Greece & the Middle East, Information