Blazer Forum - Chevy Blazer Forums

Blazer Forum - Chevy Blazer Forums (https://blazerforum.com/forum/)
-   The Lounge (https://blazerforum.com/forum/lounge-5/)
-   -   Sea salt. (https://blazerforum.com/forum/lounge-5/sea-salt-78458/)

ol' grouch Apr 7, 2013 03:48 PM

Sea salt.
 
Sometimes I wonder about peoples choices. I see "sea salt" used a lot in advertising and recipies. Sodium chloride is salt. It is just a chemical combination. I know people who will swear by the use of "sea salt". Most salt is sea salt. What we dig up from under ground is sea salt from an old sea that evaporated.

It does the job just fine and I'll bet if you did a blind test, people couldn't tell the difference. Is there a difference? Well, yes, but not the salt part. The salt we dig up is from a prebiotic era of earths history. That means it was before life got a good hold and flourished. Sea salt is recently recovered salt form todays oceans. Regular salt is mostly sodium chloride while sea salt is sodium chloride with lots of stuff in it. Sewage, bilge water, sea gull droppings, antibiotic resistant bacteria and so on.

swanman35 Apr 7, 2013 04:08 PM

I like "sea salt" because it seems to be in bigger chunks. Taste is the same though

armykyle1 Apr 7, 2013 04:15 PM

I try not to use salt. So much sodium in everything already.

rexazz2 Apr 7, 2013 04:42 PM


Originally Posted by ol' grouch (Post 578054)
.

Sewage, bilge water, sea gull droppings, antibiotic resistant bacteria and so on.

:icon_eating: num a num a num

to me it seems like you "need" more of the sea salt to get the same results
probably because of the bigger grains

BTW if most people followed food production from start to finish we would all be pretty skinny LOL

Years ago I delivered cattle to a processing plant
I needed to use the phone and that meant a trip threw the entire place to get to the lunch room
I got to see up close , kill line and gutting just to name a few of the proccesses
I suspect they figured I would be horrified LOL
I grew up in the country and have seen guys eat a sandwich in the middle of a barn as well as farm butchering

1sttimejimmyowner Apr 7, 2013 09:50 PM

I use mainly kosher salt where it comes from I have no idea.

warthogdriver Apr 7, 2013 10:04 PM

all salt comes from the ground. kosher is just a diff in the way its processed.
hell i work for Pepsi and we have kosher Pepsi in 2l.

yeah, no one wants to see how their food was transported from farm to the table.

grizzstang Apr 11, 2013 09:52 AM


Originally Posted by armykyle1 (Post 578060)
I try not to use salt. So much sodium in everything already.


Me too. I wish I would have watched my salt intake when I was a younger man.

Twip Apr 11, 2013 12:42 PM

i love salt....probably too much. but the thing with kosher salt as compared to table salt is that you have to use a little more kosher salt to get the desired amount. kosher salt has more uniform crystals and are larger. they also call it chefs salt or cooking salt because of the whole "add a pinch" thing.
if you go out and find a really good "salt shop" you will find some things in there that you wouldnt believe. there are quite a few different flavors and colors of salt. it amazing.
but its just my .02

ChevyBlazerChick Apr 11, 2013 01:57 PM

Shhh, don't be killing my love for Sea Salt and Kosher Salt!

richphotos Apr 11, 2013 05:15 PM

I personally like sea salt better.
But table salt, containing iodine, helps maintain a healthy thyroid. Of course, in moderation. But both contain the same amount of sodium, one is just less processed (sea salt)


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:15 AM.


© 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands