Salt Stuff

"Bryan" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

It depends on what you think is better. In a soup or sauce, it dissolves
(or is that melts?) and it is just another salt. Kosher salt though, is a
flake rather than grain so it will draw blood better when koshering meat.
When sprinkled on food it will give a different mouth feel and can affect
the taste buds on most people. Some people do like the different
perceptions, others could care less; different does not always mean better.
Your choice, just as you prefer popcorn salt. .
 
On Apr 24, 2:42?am, Lucille wrote:

Whenever my father drenched the livestock he would have a bit himself
on the theory that what was good for them would be good for him too.
Since our soils are selenium-and cobalt-deficient, he got plenty of
salts of heavy metals. Didn't seem to do him any harm. . . .

LW
 
On Apr 25, 5:55?am, spamtrap1888 wrote:

Is this some sort of pissing contest now? New Zealand is almost
exactly the same size as the state of Colorado.

LW
 
On Sat, 23 Apr 2011 15:16:40 -0700, Pico Rico wrote:

Steve Wrote:


If that's baited, then every post everybody makes is made knowing it's
troll-bait. Because anybody that's been on Usenet any amount of time
knows that the most innocent thing they say can and will be met with
the most anal-retentive opposition conceivably possible. And in
Usenet speak, the "conceivably possible" window is a huge, gaping
hole. Any post can explode into a massive flame war, almost always
innocently.


I agree that I'm having a hard time picturing it being used, but I've
been burned enough times by regional differences that I usually choose
not to challenge the use of abnormal. That Jam Lady, especially, can
come up with some doosies, her living in Fargo and all.

Congratulations for owning up to it an explaining your thinking
rationally :-)

-sw
 
On Sat, 23 Apr 2011 15:39:33 -0700, Pico Rico wrote:


Now see? You could have done that with "Melt", too!

OK, granted, your usage of "neck" was much more common than the "melt"
example.

-sw
 
On Apr 24, 10:49?pm, Lyndon Watson wrote:

Actually, for me, NZ to CO is a useful comparison. Comparing the area
of NZ to the area of the UK is not, because I am no more likely to
have a feel for the area of the UK than I am for the area of NZ.

But I have driven the length and breadth of Colorado, so I have a good
feeling for how big it is.
 
On Tue, 19 Apr 2011 14:48:23 -0700, Pico Rico wrote:


Yeah. If you look carefully, you'll see some grains are that are
sodium and some that are just chlorine. They really need to mix that
stuff up better.

-sw
 
On 25/04/2011 12:48 PM, Sqwertz wrote:

Don't forget to add the new one, Caesium 123, with thanks to Fukushima.
Not sure if that one will provide any health benefits!

Krypsis
 
On Apr 19, 6:46?pm, Chemo the Clown wrote:

One would seem to go against each other. The norton says table salt is
less salty than sea salt.

Greg
 
On Wed, 20 Apr 2011 07:49:51 -0500, "Nunya Bidnits"
wrote:


That's no theory, you just made that up using no brain power
whatsoever. Since many of the impurities in sea salt impart no taste
just the opposite is true... the impurities dilute the saltiness
causing one to ingest more of the compound than they would otherwise.
Sea salt is over priced enough, why pay extra for all the trash it
contains.
 
On Apr 19, 9:00?pm, "Kent" wrote:

Morton's strength was in non-kosher salt -- the free flowing additive
most notably, but later iodide. Morton's dad was Grover Cleveland's
Secy of Agriculture and the founder of Arbor Day. Morton himself
established the Morton Arboretum, west of Chicago, as a tribute to his
dad.

In the early 20th century, Morton dallied with high-tech, by
partnering with a man named Krum to bring a teletypewriter to market.
The Mor-Krum company was later known as Teletype.
 
On Apr 25, 7:49?am, "Pico Rico" wrote:

Well, if you can't trust Lyndon "Nuclear Reactors Are Built Better
Than Jane Fonda" LaRouche on nuclear energy, who can you trust?


"Low levels not harmful" != "Low levels beneficial"
 
"spamtrap1888" wrote in message
news:4861628b-4d4a-4166-b77d-42f3ea2beef3@s40g2000prg.googlegroups.com...

Except for the stuff that is not mined. Morton produces salt from the San
Francisco Bay waters in Newark, CA
 
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