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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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levelwave wrote:
> You're almost right either way - depending on which you're "adding" to > or "subracting" from... So you take Alton Brown's word as gospel, eh? You could do worse I guess. He does have at least some credibility compared to other chefs. Here's how my figures were arrived at, measuring with a salometer (which works better than reading from a celebrity chef's webpage) Measurements ============ All measurements at 60 deg F 1/4 C Morton non iodized salt = 72 grams = 2.54 oz dissolved in 4 C water (i.e. 1 C salt / gallon water proportion) measures 27 on salometer which is 7.127 % sodium chloride solution by weight which is 0.639 lbs salt / gallon 1/4 C Morton kosher salt = 56 grams = 1.98 oz dissolved in 4 C water (i.e. 1 C salt / gallon water proportion) measures 21 on salometer which is 5.543 % sodium chloride solution by weight which is 0.536 lbs salt / gallon Conclusions =========== To Convert Table -> Kosher multiply by 0.84 To Convert Kosher -> Table multiply by 1.19 As you can see, to use kosher salt for table salt you multiply by about 1.2, not 1.5 as you say. So you're "almost right". -- Reg email: RegForte (at) (that free MS email service) (dot) com |
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