Description
Salt used in food preservation
Technical
Curing salt is used in meat processing to generate a pinkish shade and to extend shelf life. It is both a color agent and a means to facilitate food preservation as it prevents or slows spoilage by bacteria or fungi. Curing salts are generally a mixture of sodium chloride and sodium nitrite, and are used for pickling meats as part of the process to make sausage or cured meat such as ham, bacon, pastrami, corned beef, etc. Though it has been suggested that the reason for using nitrite-containing curing salt is to prevent botulism, a 2018 study by the British Meat Producers Association determined that legally permitted levels of nitrite have no effect on the growth of the Clostridium botulinum bacteria that causes botulism, in line with the UK's Advisory Committee on the Microbiological Safety of Food opinion that nitrites are not required to prevent C. botulinum growth and extend shelf life..
Sensory Profile
Aroma ()
Wine Analogy
Like the sulfites in wine that act as preservatives while subtly altering aroma
Coffee Analogy
Similar to how salt enhances coffee's sweetness by suppressing bitterness
Perfume Analogy
Acts like fixatives in perfumery that stabilize volatile compounds