Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are different. I only use the canister of Morton’s iodized salt for baking.
I use kosher salt for seasoning meat, and sea salt for seasoning other things, and Maldon salt for fancy finishing (only on things where it will not melt— you are paying for the texture with that).
I use it in water to boil pasta--quite a lot actually. Pasta water should be as salty as the ocean if you want your pasta to be tasty.
Anonymous wrote:They are different. I only use the canister of Morton’s iodized salt for baking.
I use kosher salt for seasoning meat, and sea salt for seasoning other things, and Maldon salt for fancy finishing (only on things where it will not melt— you are paying for the texture with that).
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the replies. I guess I’m still not sure what the exact ‘difference’ is with a different salt. Does it taste different? Does flake sale have a different texture that’s crunchier?
I feel like I’m ready to go down a weird cooking journey and get really snobby about finishing salts but would hate to waste time/money if no one would even notice.
Anonymous wrote:I use kosher salt when cooking most things - I believe I read somewhere to do it. I think it makes a difference, but maybe it is all in my head.
Anonymous wrote:I love a little bit of fleur de sel on cookies and baked goods as well as for meat and vegetables. It adds a bit of oomph.