Unsalted butter, then add a pinch of salt?
Unsalted butter, then add a pinch of salt?
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johnnywgk

Original Poster:

2,579 posts

208 months

Thursday 29th August 2019
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Just watching Jamie ferkin Oliver making cookies. Add unsalted butter, a bit of this and a bit of that. Then add a pinch of salt! Why not use salted butter?

VAGLover

918 posts

104 months

Thursday 29th August 2019
quotequote all
Couple of reasons.
1. The salt added is of a better quality than the salt you would find in the butter
2. It allows you to more accurately control your seasoning by being in complete control of how much salt goes in

ambuletz

11,622 posts

207 months

Thursday 29th August 2019
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I've noticed this alot too, not just with him. Can't say it's something that minute that i would noticee. maybe make one batch with and one without?

21TonyK

13,110 posts

235 months

Thursday 29th August 2019
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A quick check on google tells me salted butter contains 1.7g of salt per 100g. Thats quite a lot.

Adding salt to a sweet food item is there to enhance and promote the flavour, not add a salty taste.

So unsalted with a pinch makes sense for small quantities.

Edited by 21TonyK on Thursday 29th August 22:37

FurtiveFreddy

8,577 posts

263 months

Thursday 29th August 2019
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I never use salted butter in any type of cooking, savoury or sweet.

You can add it but you can't take it away.

Lucas CAV

3,068 posts

245 months

Friday 30th August 2019
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VAGLover said:
Couple of reasons.
1. The salt added is of a better quality than the salt you would find in the butter
Sodium Chloride Vs Sodium Chloride?

VAGLover

918 posts

104 months

Saturday 31st August 2019
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Lucas CAV said:
VAGLover said:
Couple of reasons.
1. The salt added is of a better quality than the salt you would find in the butter
Sodium Chloride Vs Sodium Chloride?
its the minerals, flavour and texture

hence Malden sea Salt v table salt.

mikal83

5,340 posts

278 months

Saturday 31st August 2019
quotequote all
FurtiveFreddy said:
I never use salted butter in any type of cooking, savoury or sweet.

You can add it but you can't take it away.
This.

Lucas CAV

3,068 posts

245 months

Saturday 31st August 2019
quotequote all
VAGLover said:
Lucas CAV said:
VAGLover said:
Couple of reasons.
1. The salt added is of a better quality than the salt you would find in the butter
Sodium Chloride Vs Sodium Chloride?
its the minerals, flavour and texture

hence Malden sea Salt v table salt.
Salt crystals in butter?

VAGLover

918 posts

104 months

Saturday 31st August 2019
quotequote all
Lucas CAV said:
VAGLover said:
Lucas CAV said:
VAGLover said:
Couple of reasons.
1. The salt added is of a better quality than the salt you would find in the butter
Sodium Chloride Vs Sodium Chloride?
its the minerals, flavour and texture

hence Malden sea Salt v table salt.
Salt crystals in butter?
No. The butter generally has lower quality salt. If you use unsalted you can use the finest salt going alongside it

Murph7355

41,331 posts

282 months

Sunday 1st September 2019
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Salt's used for more than just flavour in baking.

Controlling the amount is the primary reason for me.

(I also like unsalted butter on bread with a few grains of decent salt - as it's not fully blended the taste in your mouth is different smile).

21TonyK

13,110 posts

235 months

Sunday 1st September 2019
quotequote all
Lucas CAV said:
Salt crystals in butter?
Yep, Morrisons do their own. Pretty good stuff as well.

https://groceries.morrisons.com/webshop/product/Mo...


RobXjcoupe

3,390 posts

117 months

Sunday 1st September 2019
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Hot toast spread with salted butter, then grind a bit of your favourite posh salt on top. Awesome smile

anonymous-user

80 months

Wednesday 4th September 2019
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As has been said already, it is more the control of seasoning that you can vary when adding salt afterwards. You have no idea how salty it will be if using salted butter.

geeks

11,331 posts

165 months

Wednesday 4th September 2019
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Salted butter has a higher water content to absorb the salt. Unsalted butter doesn't. It was discussed on a cooking program recently and two chefs were going back and forth over it. Can't remember whom though, one was french, might have even been Gordon Ramsay, Gino D'Acampo and Fred Sirieix now I think about it.