This may seem like a silly question, but given that each persons' tastes are different why is it that salt is added during cooking? It seems better to just allow the person eating the food to add their own salt to taste as opposed to forcing the same amount of saltiness on everyone equally.
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A few general reasons:
But of course, if you're eating with people who don't like much salt at all, and salt can easily be added at the table (a pureed soup, for example), then there's nothing wrong with waiting until then. |
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The main reason salt is added during cooking and not after is to ensure a better distribution. This makes every bite taste as intended by the cook. |
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Besides the above entries; Adding salt later brings the taste of the salt forward and masks the taste/flavors of the meal. |
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Here are 2 more reasons salt is often added during cooking.
Here are some reasons to salt after cooking.
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Chemically, salt is just salt, that is sodium chloride. Salts from different sources may have different degrees of contamination, but these are small and pretty well irrelevant in the context of the dilution in a dish of food. Salt is very readily detected by the tongue on impact and that is why the salt that comes in large flakes - and added after cooking - is prized. Add flaked salt after cooking - you'll get the impact without the health repercussions of excessive salt intake - the rest is marketing hype. (I exclude of course things like breadmaking where salt is integral to the process). |
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The short answer: seasoning. We can only taste four (or, five, depending on whether or not you consider umami) flavors: salty, sweet, bitter, and sour. Without any of these, food will taste bland, no matter how it was prepared. The best tasting food usually combines all of these in some ratio, depending on which flavors the cook wants to emphasize and which flavors will play a supporting role. Salting during cooking is a subtle technique to season certain ingredients/flavors and intensify their flavor. Thomas Keller has a good explanation: http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-master-class-thomas-keller-20110428,0,3142391.htmlstory When properly seasoned, food shouldn't taste salty. Adding salt at the end of cooking almost invariably makes it taste salty, rather than seasoning and intensifying flavors. |
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I do think the main reason is that it's better distributed but I'll add just a little something: Osmosis! If your water is not salted then the minerals inside your ingredients will be released in order to have a balance with the water. On the contrary if the water is too salted, then your ingredients will absorb the salt, and then it will be too salty. Usually I don't like that much salt, but when it's come to boiling, I fell like I need to add a lil' bit of it. Otherwise, the food seems to have lost some of its taste. |
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Not only does the salt allow for more even distribution of the salt, but salt has the ability to bring flavors out. This can be illustrated by sautéing veggies or searing meat. If you give the ingredients a little kosher salt, you can really change your dish around. (Especially kosher salt since it has a lower sodium level that other salts, therefore more curing and less salty) A great example of this steak. Before searing a steak, give it a light dusting of kosher salt and let it rest for ~15mins or so. When you throw it in the pan, you'll notice a delicious crust forming. That's because the kosher salt brought out lots of protein laden water from the steak to the surface. Hope this helps. EDIT:
A bit of clarification about "kosher salt being less salty". For example: |
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