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Preserving by Salting

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  • #16
    Originally posted by Alison View Post
    You need to make sure it's pure salt you use (I found somewhere that sold big bags of coarse salt pretty cheap but can't remember where, possibly Costco?!?) as a lot of commercial table salts have some extra stuff in them to make them easier to pour but you don't want it for preserviing - am guessing it'll say on the packet.
    Could I just add to Alison's recommendation.

    You need cooking salt, ie pure sodium chloride. If you buy table salt it has an anti-caking additive (Sodium HexacyanoferrateII).

    The only time I tried to salt our runner beans, I used table salt, and the beans went mouldy.

    Salting is an extremely old way of preserving food - way before additives and E numbers

    If you are going to try and preserve food in this way, you need to go back to basics, ie in my case how granny would have done them.

    No additives.

    valmarg

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    • #17
      Originally posted by northepaul View Post
      Funnily enough I was *just* trying this out! Preserving lemons though....
      I tried lemons last year. They are fab!

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      • #18
        The point to using salt is that it preserves on the same basis as drying, it makes the water in the food unavailable to the micro-organisms that cause spoilage, and without water they cannot do their harm.
        The sugar in jam has a similar function, which is why jam needs boiling to setting point, the ratio of sugar to 'everything else' is what makes it keep. Commercial 'reduced sugar' jams need refidgerating once opened for exactly that reason.
        Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by Jillyreeves View Post
          Have decided to have a go at Salting Runner Beans to preserve them and save on freezer space but was wondering if what other veg could be stored this way

          Has any one tried anything else with any success?
          Hi ... I tried this method a couple of years ago. I got the recipe/ proportions off the internet. The process went quite well and the beans looked edible.

          However despite rinsing the salt off prior to cooking they were still too salty for us. Upon reflection I think the recipe must have been how salting was done years / decades ago .... and as less salt is recommended in our diets these days they were far too salty for our liking.

          Learnt from the experience though!
          Last edited by leicestershirelass; 26-09-2010, 10:39 AM.
          Lass

          In all things of nature there is something marvellous.
          - Aristotle

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          • #20
            Originally posted by leicestershirelass View Post
            Hi ... I tried this method a couple of years ago. I got the recipe/ proportions off the internet. The process went quite well and the beans looked edible.

            However despite rinsing the salt off prior to cooking they were still too salty for us. Upon reflection I think the recipe must have been how salting was done years / decades ago .... and as less salt is recommended in our diets these days they were far too salty for our liking.

            Learnt from the experience though!
            You do need to rinse and change the water quite a lot otherwise they do still taste pretty salty. We don't add salt when we cook veg normally but still managed to remove enough salt to enjoy the preserved beans.

            Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.

            Which one are you and is it how you want to be?

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            • #21
              I bought some italian salted capers recently and before use, I rinsed them and soaked them for acouple of hours. Maybe that would be a good idea with runners too?

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