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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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On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 16:45:24 -0500, Sqwertz >
wrote: > On Wed, 05 Apr 2017 13:15:10 -0700, sf wrote: > > > On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 14:17:25 -0500, Sqwertz > > > wrote: > > > >> Why would it say SALTED in big letters on the front? > > >> Cooking mirin wine is salted. It's the only kind of mirin available > >> to most people in the U.S. Even my largest Asian grocer doesn't carry > >> mirin for drinking - only the salted cooking varieties). And drinking > >> mirin isn't not available in any of the large liquor/wine stores > >> either. I've looked extensively for both mirin and Shaohsing wine. > > > >> Practicaally everyone in the U.S. uses the salted cooking variety > >> since that's the only stuff available. > > > Why would you call it SALTED unless it specifically says so on the > > front label? Going by the nit you and Cindy are picking you should be > > calling every commercial product that contains salt, even if it's the > > last ingredient in the list, SALTED. > > Cooking wines are salted to keep people from drinking them and to > bypass liquor laws and taxes. They usually have a fine-print > statement on the bottle saying they contain 2% salt, but certainly not > in big letters. > > How and why you are comparing this to foods that are salted, or why > "salted" is in "big letters" is a mystery. The fact is that 99% of > the mirin you find in grocery stores is salted. That is the only > issue at hand here. But you're going off on some other zig-zagging > tangent. > You drink Mirin? Wow. > > I look forward to your future posts. > > My pleasure. > > -sw -- Avoid cutting yourself when slicing vegetables by getting someone else to hold them. |
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On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 20:59:40 -0500, Sqwertz >
wrote: > On Wed, 05 Apr 2017 16:32:31 -0700, sf wrote: > > > On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 16:45:24 -0500, Sqwertz > > > wrote: > > > >> On Wed, 05 Apr 2017 13:15:10 -0700, sf wrote: > >> > >>> On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 14:17:25 -0500, Sqwertz > > >>> wrote: > >>> > >>>> Why would it say SALTED in big letters on the front? > >> > >>>> Cooking mirin wine is salted. It's the only kind of mirin available > >>>> to most people in the U.S. Even my largest Asian grocer doesn't carry > >>>> mirin for drinking - only the salted cooking varieties). And drinking > >>>> mirin isn't not available in any of the large liquor/wine stores > >>>> either. I've looked extensively for both mirin and Shaohsing wine. > >>> > >>>> Practicaally everyone in the U.S. uses the salted cooking variety > >>>> since that's the only stuff available. > >> > >>> Why would you call it SALTED unless it specifically says so on the > >>> front label? Going by the nit you and Cindy are picking you should be > >>> calling every commercial product that contains salt, even if it's the > >>> last ingredient in the list, SALTED. > >> > >> Cooking wines are salted to keep people from drinking them and to > >> bypass liquor laws and taxes. They usually have a fine-print > >> statement on the bottle saying they contain 2% salt, but certainly not > >> in big letters. > >> > >> How and why you are comparing this to foods that are salted, or why > >> "salted" is in "big letters" is a mystery. The fact is that 99% of > >> the mirin you find in grocery stores is salted. That is the only > >> issue at hand here. But you're going off on some other zig-zagging > >> tangent. > > > > You drink Mirin? Wow. > > !?! <boggle> ?!? > > Talk about a Space Case. Have you taken your Nemenda today? > > -sw Everybody knows you can't see the forest for the trees. -- Avoid cutting yourself when slicing vegetables by getting someone else to hold them. |
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