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Kosher salt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromKitchen salt)
"Kitchen salt" and "coarse salt" redirect here. For other coarse salts, seeRock salt andBrining salt.
This article is about generic coarse-grained salt. For foods meeting Kosher dietary guidelines, seeKashrut.
Coarse additive-free edible salt

Comparison of table salt (left) with kosher salt (right)

Kosher salt orkitchen salt[1] (also calledcooking salt,rock salt,kashering salt, orkoshering salt) is coarse edible salt usually without common additives such asiodine,[2][3][4][5] typically used in cooking and not at the table. It consists mainly ofsodium chloride and may includeanticaking agents.

Etymology

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Coarse edible salt is a kitchen staple, but its name varies widely in various cultures and countries. The termkosher salt gained common usage in theUnited States and refers to its use in theJewish religious practice ofdry brining meats, known askashering, e.g. asalt for kashering, and not to the salt itself being manufactured under any religious guidelines. Some brands further identifykosher-certified salt as being approved by a religious body.[6]

Culinary history

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In cooking recipes published in the United States since about 2010, kosher salt has largely replaced the more fine-grained table salt as the kind of salt called for in the recipes.[7] This may be a public health concern, because kosher salt does not contain iodine, which is added to table salt to preventiodine deficiency.[7]

The popularity of kosher salt in cooking began in the 1980s with professional chefs, which preferred kosher salt because its coarser grains are easier to pick up and distribute with the fingers than table salt.[7] In the 1990s, theFood Network television channel popularized kosher salt for home cooking. On television, kosher salt had the additional advantage that its grains were more easily visible and looked more attractive.[7] Moreover, influential cookbooks such asThe Food Lab byJ. Kenji López-Alt andSalt, Fat, Acid, Heat bySamin Nosrat "devote[d] paragraphs to the benefits of kosher over table salt", making it "thelingua franca of restaurant kitchens" and ashibboleth for home cooks who wanted to demonstrate their seriousness about cooking.[7]

Another trend that made kosher salt more popular among nonprofessional cooks was recipes being increasingly published on the Internet, such as in blogs, where readers could interact with the authors through comments and often demanded more specific instructions than "salt to taste". This meant that authors who specified volume measurements of salt, such as teaspoons, had to specify the kind of salt to be used. They often chose kosher salt as the type of salt they themselves were most familiar with.[7]

Grain of kosher salt taken at 60× magnification

Usage

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General cooking

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Due to the lack of metallic or off-tasting additives such as iodine,fluoride ordextrose, it is often used in the kitchen instead of additive-containingtable salt.[8][9] Estimating the amount of salt when salting by hand can also be easier due to the larger grain size.[10] Some recipes specifically call forvolume measurement of kosher/kitchen salt, which for some brands weighs less per measure due to its lower density and is therefore less salty than an equal volume measurement of table salt; recipes which call for a specified weight of salt are more consistent.[11] Different brands of salt vary dramatically in density; for one brand the same volume measure may contain twice as much salt (by mass) as for another brand.[12]

Brining or kashering meat

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Kosher salt applied to chicken showing extracted moisture after one hour
Main articles:Brining andKashering

The coarse-grained salt is used to create adry brine, which increases succulence and flavor and satisfies somereligious requirements, sometimes with flavor additions such asherbs,spices orsugar.[13] The meat is typically soaked in cool water and drained and then completely covered with a thin layer of salt—and then allowed to stand on a rack or board for an hour or more. The larger salt granules remain on the surface of the meat, for the most part undissolved, and absorb fluids from the meat, which are then partially reabsorbed with the salt and any added flavors, essentially brining the meat in its own juices. The salt rub is then rinsed off and discarded before cooking.[14][13]

Cleaning

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Due to its grain size, the salt is also used as an abrasive cleaner for cookware such ascast iron skillets. Mixed with oil, it retains its abrasiveness but can be easily dissolved with water after cleaning, unlike cleansers based onpumice orcalcium carbonate, which can leave a gritty residue if not thoroughly rinsed away.[15]

Manufacturing

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Rather than cubic crystals, kosher salt has a flat plate-like shape and for some brands may also have a hollow pyramidal shape.Morton Salt produces flat kosher salt whileDiamond Crystal produces pyramidal. The flat form is usually made when cubic crystals are forced into this shape under pressure, usually between rollers. The pyramidal salt crystals are generally made by an evaporative process called theAlberger process. Kosher salt is usually manufactured with a grain size larger than table salt grains. Diamond Crystal salt is made by Cargill inSt. Clair, MI and Morton Salt is from Chicago, IL.[16]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Kitchen salt definition". Collins. 2018.
  2. ^The Good housekeeping cookbook. New York: Hearst Books. 2001. pp. 15.ISBN 1588163989.OCLC 54962450.
  3. ^Bader, Myles. (1998).The wizard of food presents 10,001 food facts, chef's secrets & household hints : more usable food facts and household hints than any single book ever published. Las Vegas, Nev.: Northstar Pub.ISBN 0964674173.OCLC 40460309.
  4. ^Simmons, Marie (April 2008).Things cooks love (First ed.). Kansas City. pp. 67.ISBN 9780740769764.OCLC 167764416.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^Morgan, Diane (2010).Gifts cooks love : recipes for giving. Kansas City: Andrews McMeel Pub. pp. 14.ISBN 9780740793509.OCLC 555648047.
  6. ^"Kosher Salt Guide". SaltWorks. 2010.
  7. ^abcdefCushing, Ellen (March 8, 2025)."The Great Salt Shake-Up".The Atlantic.ISSN 2151-9463. RetrievedMarch 8, 2025.
  8. ^Iodine Nutriture in the United States: Summary of a Conference, October 31, 1970. National Academies. October 31, 1970. pp. 36–.ISBN 978-0-309-35853-8. NAP:13984.
  9. ^World Health Organization (2011).Bulletin of the World Health Organization: Bulletin de L'Organisation Mondiale de la Santé. World Health Organization.
  10. ^Nosrat, Samin (April 25, 2017)."The Single Most Important Ingredient".The New York Times. RetrievedApril 7, 2018.
  11. ^Kaiser, Emily (February 25, 2004)."Chefs Who Salt Early if Not Often".The New York Times. RetrievedApril 8, 2018.
  12. ^"The Kosher Salt Question: What Box Does What? There's a Difference".TASTE. October 11, 2017. RetrievedJuly 18, 2019.
  13. ^abBenwick, Bonnie S. (November 14, 2007)."Wet Brining vs. Dry: Give That Bird a Bath".The Washington Post. RetrievedApril 7, 2018.
  14. ^Luban, Yaakov (2010)."Orthodox Union Kosher Primer". Orthodox Union.
  15. ^Lewis, Hunter (January 23, 2012)."How to Clean Your Cast-Iron Skillet".Bon Appetit. RetrievedApril 8, 2018.
  16. ^"Kosher Salt"(PDF). Salt Institute. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on March 2, 2024.
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