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by powmonk
1932 days ago
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The info about salt is plain wrong. Kosher salt is used for curing meat and as a mainly decorative addition to baking, you don't need to use it for cooking, it doesn't dissolve noticably slower in liquids. In fact when most recipes specify a volumetric measurement of salt they mean table salt and if you were to use kosher or sea salt you would be under seasoning due the reduced volume, nothing to do with how quickly it dissolves. You should definitely not be using large grain salt in baking for this reason, unless it is to decorate a finished product. Iodine deficiencies were and are very, very real. They're also on the rise due to food deserts and rising poverty. Iodised salt largely eliminated iodine deficiencies so people with poor knowledge of the history think they just went away. Most processed food does not contained iodised salt, so table salt is an essential source or iodine for a great many people around the world. Idosing salt was and is one of the greatest public health success stories of the 20th century, do not talk about it like some conspiracy by government. |
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That’s really not true. Most food writers would tell you that the standard is kosher salt, and many would specify diamond kosher