Food: Salt
Salt spray cellar   (+5)  [vote for, against]
A healthier reminder of the sea

We are constantly exhorted to reduce salt, which is a good idea. However, soya sauce, while not salt, is nonetheless salty and goes further than the quantity of salt it contains would in seasoning food. A solution to this would clearly be a saline one, allowing food to taste saltier than if sprinkled with grains of salt - it would be easier to taste the salt in solution than if it started off as crystals. To reduce salt consumption still further, a mechanically operated spray would make it possible to provide the minimum necessary quantity of salt, as a solution, by gently misting one's food with brine. It would also be reminiscent of the sea.
A misting salt cellar could be cleaned easily by immersion in fresh water.
-- nineteenthly, Dec 20 2005

Reminds me of this http://webster.stat...010705saltbrine.pdf
[Shz, Dec 21 2005]

Complete with Gale Force 9 winds?
-- DrCurry, Dec 21 2005


Havent seen you around in while, 9/10ly.

+
-- DesertFox, Dec 21 2005


Ever lie by your window on a stormy day at the beach? Its the best salt lick ever. But its for the nose and eyes. I guess I prefer salty air over food with salty air on it. Bun.
-- Ponies for Parties, Dec 21 2005


There is a big taste difference in unsalted butter from the salted type … with just about 100mg Sodium present per tablespoon of butter compared to 900mg Sodium present per tablespoon of soy sauce.
-- reensure, Dec 21 2005


Thanks for the vote, [DesertFox]. I haven't been around much because i felt i was in danger of becoming inane and also my mother in law died.
-- nineteenthly, Dec 21 2005


[bites tongue]
-- DrCurry, Dec 21 2005


I can see this in a spray bottle. Why the cellar?
-- Shz, Dec 21 2005


It needn't make food too soggy because something like soya sauce doesn't if added in sensible quantities, and that'd be all that's needed.
[DrCurry]LOL.
-- nineteenthly, Dec 21 2005



random, halfbakery