Posted by David Lebovitz : 04 Sept 2013
When it comes to baking and
desserts, one doesn’t necessarily think of salt as a flavor. But more and more,
I keep considering, and reconsidering, the role that salt plays in just about
everything I bake. And because I keep both salted and unsalted butter on hand –
I can’t imagine my morning toast without a little salted butter spread over the
top – I’ll sometimes reach for the salted variety when tackling a baking
project or making dessert.
I wasn’t the first person to put
salt on dessert; people from various cultures have been sprinkling salt on
fresh fruit for ages. And many pastry chefs, as well as some big chocolate
companies, have gotten in on the “salt in chocolate” act as well.
But I’ve gotten so used to
sprinkling it on sweets that sometimes if I’m having my last course in a
restaurant and I think the dessert needs a little perking up, you’ll find me
looking around the table for a little bowl of flaky sea salt. Salt is so
important to me that I’ll sometimes carry a little wooden box of fleur de sel,
which when I’d bring out in restaurants, my co-diners would give me a look as
if I was being pretentious. (Then – of course – they’d ask if they could have a
pinch too.)
Continue Reading Salted Butter
Chocolate Sauce...
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