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April 19, 2016 by Gina Stipo 3 Comments

Why does every food writer and recipe I read in the US call for kosher salt?  It’s so prevalent I find myself wondering who is behind the big push for Americans to be better cooks by using kosher salt?  I was reading the recent NYTimes article “The Single Most Important Ingredient”  by Samin Nosrat who wrote “Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat”, and was super excited to see what she said about salt!  Because it truly IS the single most important ingredient you can use. And there it was – she advocated kosher salt.  I was crushed.

Allow me to clarify a few things:kosher_salt2

Kosher salt, used exclusively in the US, does not equal whole sea salt.  Sea salt is made up of sodium choride (about 85%), as well as dozens of naturally-occurring minerals that help to temper and balance the sodium, both on the palate and in the body.  Kosher salt goes through a process that strips all these minerals, leaving 99% sodium to which a chemical is added as an anti-caking agent.  It’s called “kosher” because when koshering meat you needed to use a large kernel of salt, not the fine stuff that would melt.  So, kosher salt has large kernels, what they call “grosso” in Italian or “gros” in French. 

I lived in Italy for 13 years, long enough for my palate to change.  After a few years, when I would return to the US for a visit, I was struck by how the addition of kosher salt adds acrid and bitter notes to any dish.  The Culinary Institute of America did a study that reflected this surprising development in their quest for taste differences in various whole sea salts; I’m on the hunt for that study and will post it as soon as I can get my hands on it.

This denatured salt is then chemically laced to reduce clumping.  It renders a product far inferior to natural, whole sea salt.  I call it a “dead salt”.  Kosher salt certainly should not be used in trying to reproduce authentic world cuisine, such as the Saveur magazine article on arab influences on the Italian island of Sicily.  Here is a recipe from the city of Trapani on the west coast of Sicily, where they’ve been farming salt since the ancient Phoenicians 5000 years ago, and yet the Saveur recipe calls for kosher salt!  Why?  Salt from Trapani is a main export from Sicily and it’s available in the US – in grocery stores (Alessi brand), at TJMAXX, Home Goods and Italian specialty shops near you!IMG_0636

There is farmed whole sea salt available in the US from around the world: France, Spain, Brazil.  But even salt mined from a mountain, such as beautiful Himalayan pink salt from the mountains of Pakistan, was once a sea 10-100 million years ago.

Well I for one have had enough and am on a crusade to fight kosher salt and help whole sea salt find its place in America’s kitchen.  Join me! Buon Appetito!

 

 

 

https://www.attheitaliantable.com/kosher-salt-us/

Filed Under: Blog Categories, Salt, Sicily Tagged With: italian sea salt, kosher salt, salt, sea salt, Trapani, whole sea salt

August 1, 2011 by Gina Stipo Leave a Comment

Ancient Salt Flats of Italy

I recently went to visit the oldest remaining salt flat on the mainland of Italy, Cervia in Emilia Romagna. Up on the east coast, sandwiched between the ancient town of Ravenna with its amazing Byzantine mosaics and the chic beach town of Rimini with its discos and crowded beaches, Cervia is a quiet marsh that has been used for salt production since the Etruscan times.

Less than 800 yards inland, the salt flats produce a beautiful, sweet white salt (sale dolce) that is hand raked and evaporated in the full sun of the summer. From June to September, water from the sea is fed by canals into large, shallow flats, and allowed to concentrate until it is more than 75% saltier than seawater. Only one of the original 150 salt flats holds to the traditional methods, but it is still possible to see the locals raking and drying the salt in the sun. You can purchase sacks of this moist, sweet salt at the visitors center or by ordering online from Salina di Cervia.

Salt is getting a bad rap these days, and unjustly so. It is the only mineral that we eat and it’s the one ingredient that is common among all the cuisines of the world. Salt is crucial to our survival and has been the source of unrest and wars throughout our history.
Sea salt is a whole food made not of just sodium chloride but of a myriad of minerals such as calcium, magnesium and potassium, and trace minerals like selenium, boron and iodine. When salt is processed (kosher, table salt) all the other minerals are taken out and just sodium chloride remains. An anti-caking agent is then added. Industrially processed salt can lead to a state of imbalance in the body, which in turns leads to disease.
If you’re as interested in salt as I am, check out the salt guru, Mark Bitterman, on his salt blog: www.saltnews.com. He also has a fabulous book called “Salted: A Manifesto on the World’s Most Essential Mineral”. Another good read on the history of salt is Mark Kurlansky’s “SALT”.
For your own visit to the salt flats, contact the visitors center below:
Parco della Salina di Cervia
Via Salara, 6
Cervia (Ravenna)
Tel. +39 0544.971765
www.salinadicervia.it

Filed Under: Blog Categories Tagged With: cervia, italian food, italian salt, italian sea salt, ravenna, salt, salt flats, salt flats italy, sea salt

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