On Tuesday, June 16, 2020 at 9:43:23 AM UTC-4, Mike Duffy wrote:
> On Tue, 16 Jun 2020 06:02:05 -0700, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
>
> > kosher salt.
>
> Is there *any* difference in taste or chemistry during cooking?
No. But I have a cellar of kosher salt handy, so I use it. I mentioned
that it's kosher salt only because 1/4 teaspoon of kosher salt is
substantially less mass than 1/4 teaspoon of table salt.
Kosher salt is only sparingly soluble at cool temperatures. It
will maintain its crunchiness better than table salt.
> Is there something added or not added to 'normal' vs. kosher salt?
It's about the crystal shape more than anything else, but kosher salt
is never iodized.
> BTW, I did just now spend a few minutes looking on the web regarding
> iodide taste. The concensus (1st 3 web sites) is that concentrations in
> salt would need to be much greater for anyone to taste the difference.
>
> (Sea salt does have a different taste than table salt due to Mg, Ca, K,
> Al, Fe, CO3, SO4, PO3 and other even less populous ions.)
>
>
> For empirical purposes, the only difference between Kosher and table salt
> is grain size. Other places might sell indistinguishable 'pickling' salt,
> but cannot legally put a 'Kosher' label on the package unless a rabbi
> pronounces unwritten vowels and waves his staff or something.
No, that's not the case. Kosher salt is suitable for kashering meat, but
there's no rabbi involved in its manufacture.
Pickling salt is different from kosher salt.
Even brands of kosher salt differ in their crystal size. Diamond Crystal
is noticeably smaller than Morton's.
Cindy Hamilton