Anonymous wrote:
Besides salt, fine dining restaurants are heavy on fat (butter, oil) too. An 8-10 course set menu is easily 2000 calories, without wine. I find it a lot of work to eat in one of those.
Anonymous wrote:NP and it sucks when you have high BP and it’s it is out of control for days after eating that crap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because salt makes things taste good.
Sounds like you're probably one of those weird health nuts who thinks any seasoning at all will kill them instantly and you're just used to awful, bland food. The fact that you came here to complain and of course virtue signal about how much you hate salt pretty much guarantees you're some sort of drama king/queen.
Think about this rationally, do you really think it's more likely that every single dish in every single restaurant is inedibly salty (and they somehow all stay in business and aren't overrun with bad reviews) or that your perception of salt is to blame.
There's an old saying, if everywhere you go smells like poop, check your shoes.
DP No salt hides things bad cooking. You must not eat out.
No. https://www.chefsresource.com/why-does-salt-make-food-taste-better/
The sodium in salt triggers a reaction in the taste buds, essentially making the flavors more pronounced and vibrant.
How can someone be so dim they they have trouble understanding that too much salt =\= no salt?
How can someone be so dim that they take someone's word that something is over salted to the point of inedible? If that were true, the restaurant would be out of business.
McDonalds is inedible trash food but is a multiple hundreds of billions of dollars business. As if you made a point. You really are dim. Does light even escape the vicinity of the black hole you have for a brain?
Stop sucking as a chef. Learn to balance flavors better rather than relying on cheap gimmicks like MoR SaLT! moR FaT!
Anonymous wrote:Learn to balance flavors
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because salt makes things taste good.
Sounds like you're probably one of those weird health nuts who thinks any seasoning at all will kill them instantly and you're just used to awful, bland food. The fact that you came here to complain and of course virtue signal about how much you hate salt pretty much guarantees you're some sort of drama king/queen.
Think about this rationally, do you really think it's more likely that every single dish in every single restaurant is inedibly salty (and they somehow all stay in business and aren't overrun with bad reviews) or that your perception of salt is to blame.
There's an old saying, if everywhere you go smells like poop, check your shoes.
DP No salt hides things bad cooking. You must not eat out.
No. https://www.chefsresource.com/why-does-salt-make-food-taste-better/
The sodium in salt triggers a reaction in the taste buds, essentially making the flavors more pronounced and vibrant.
How can someone be so dim they they have trouble understanding that too much salt =\= no salt?
How can someone be so dim that they take someone's word that something is over salted to the point of inedible? If that were true, the restaurant would be out of business.
McDonalds is inedible trash food but is a multiple hundreds of billions of dollars business. As if you made a point. You really are dim. Does light even escape the vicinity of the black hole you have for a brain?
Stop sucking as a chef. Learn to balance flavors better rather than relying on cheap gimmicks like MoR SaLT! moR FaT!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to derail this, but when did we start calling salt "sodium"? What about the chlorine?
When we started getting told to watch our “sodium” intake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because salt makes things taste good.
Sounds like you're probably one of those weird health nuts who thinks any seasoning at all will kill them instantly and you're just used to awful, bland food. The fact that you came here to complain and of course virtue signal about how much you hate salt pretty much guarantees you're some sort of drama king/queen.
Think about this rationally, do you really think it's more likely that every single dish in every single restaurant is inedibly salty (and they somehow all stay in business and aren't overrun with bad reviews) or that your perception of salt is to blame.
There's an old saying, if everywhere you go smells like poop, check your shoes.
DP No salt hides things bad cooking. You must not eat out.
No. https://www.chefsresource.com/why-does-salt-make-food-taste-better/
The sodium in salt triggers a reaction in the taste buds, essentially making the flavors more pronounced and vibrant.
How can someone be so dim they they have trouble understanding that too much salt =\= no salt?
How can someone be so dim that they take someone's word that something is over salted to the point of inedible? If that were true, the restaurant would be out of business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because salt makes things taste good.
Sounds like you're probably one of those weird health nuts who thinks any seasoning at all will kill them instantly and you're just used to awful, bland food. The fact that you came here to complain and of course virtue signal about how much you hate salt pretty much guarantees you're some sort of drama king/queen.
Think about this rationally, do you really think it's more likely that every single dish in every single restaurant is inedibly salty (and they somehow all stay in business and aren't overrun with bad reviews) or that your perception of salt is to blame.
There's an old saying, if everywhere you go smells like poop, check your shoes.
DP No salt hides things bad cooking. You must not eat out.
No. https://www.chefsresource.com/why-does-salt-make-food-taste-better/
The sodium in salt triggers a reaction in the taste buds, essentially making the flavors more pronounced and vibrant.
How can someone be so dim they they have trouble understanding that too much salt =\= no salt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because salt makes things taste good.
Sounds like you're probably one of those weird health nuts who thinks any seasoning at all will kill them instantly and you're just used to awful, bland food. The fact that you came here to complain and of course virtue signal about how much you hate salt pretty much guarantees you're some sort of drama king/queen.
Think about this rationally, do you really think it's more likely that every single dish in every single restaurant is inedibly salty (and they somehow all stay in business and aren't overrun with bad reviews) or that your perception of salt is to blame.
There's an old saying, if everywhere you go smells like poop, check your shoes.
DP No salt hides things bad cooking. You must not eat out.
No. https://www.chefsresource.com/why-does-salt-make-food-taste-better/
The sodium in salt triggers a reaction in the taste buds, essentially making the flavors more pronounced and vibrant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because salt makes things taste good.
Sounds like you're probably one of those weird health nuts who thinks any seasoning at all will kill them instantly and you're just used to awful, bland food. The fact that you came here to complain and of course virtue signal about how much you hate salt pretty much guarantees you're some sort of drama king/queen.
Think about this rationally, do you really think it's more likely that every single dish in every single restaurant is inedibly salty (and they somehow all stay in business and aren't overrun with bad reviews) or that your perception of salt is to blame.
There's an old saying, if everywhere you go smells like poop, check your shoes.
DP No salt hides things bad cooking. You must not eat out.
The sodium in salt triggers a reaction in the taste buds, essentially making the flavors more pronounced and vibrant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to derail this, but when did we start calling salt "sodium"? What about the chlorine?
When we started getting told to watch our “sodium” intake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because salt makes things taste good.
Sounds like you're probably one of those weird health nuts who thinks any seasoning at all will kill them instantly and you're just used to awful, bland food. The fact that you came here to complain and of course virtue signal about how much you hate salt pretty much guarantees you're some sort of drama king/queen.
Think about this rationally, do you really think it's more likely that every single dish in every single restaurant is inedibly salty (and they somehow all stay in business and aren't overrun with bad reviews) or that your perception of salt is to blame.
There's an old saying, if everywhere you go smells like poop, check your shoes.
Nah, you just suck at cooking and can't balance umami, bitter, sweet, salt, and heat. You're a sub par chef who relies entirely on fat and salt to make their dishes "taste good". McDonald's does that too.
Wow, I had no idea OP was posting about my cooking. When should I expect to see the $600 they paid in my account?
No wait, I guess you're just functionally illiterate. I bet there are some night classes you could take to fix that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because salt makes things taste good.
Sounds like you're probably one of those weird health nuts who thinks any seasoning at all will kill them instantly and you're just used to awful, bland food. The fact that you came here to complain and of course virtue signal about how much you hate salt pretty much guarantees you're some sort of drama king/queen.
Think about this rationally, do you really think it's more likely that every single dish in every single restaurant is inedibly salty (and they somehow all stay in business and aren't overrun with bad reviews) or that your perception of salt is to blame.
There's an old saying, if everywhere you go smells like poop, check your shoes.
Nah, you just suck at cooking and can't balance umami, bitter, sweet, salt, and heat. You're a sub par chef who relies entirely on fat and salt to make their dishes "taste good". McDonald's does that too.
Anonymous wrote:Not to derail this, but when did we start calling salt "sodium"? What about the chlorine?