lougord99 wrote:In many recipes that involve boiling a starch, potatoes or pasta etc, it calls for salting the water ( sometimes it calls for heavily salting the water ) before adding the starch. I know that salt raises the temperature of the boiling water, but is there another reason for the salted water?
JoelF wrote:Hmm... I'd thought it more significant, but according to the math on Wikipedia, 10gm salt per kg of water (or about 1 tsp/quart) only raises the temperature of boiling by .17C.
gjdad wrote:Consider this experiment -- just do not do it: Bring two pots of plain water to near boiling and then toss salt in one of them. The pot receiving the salt will likely explode into violent boiling because the salt crystals provided nucleation sites that would allow the water to vaporize as the salt fell through the superheated liquid. Same thing would happen is you used fine sand. Under those conditions, the salted water wins. However, that is not (or should not be) the way things are done.
http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/g ... n01021.htm
Mhays wrote:There is one legit reason to add salt after the water has started boiling: it disperses and dissolves in the water more quickly, and is less likely to sit on the bottom and possibly corrode your pot.
Darren72 wrote:gjdad wrote:Consider this experiment -- just do not do it: Bring two pots of plain water to near boiling and then toss salt in one of them. The pot receiving the salt will likely explode into violent boiling because the salt crystals provided nucleation sites that would allow the water to vaporize as the salt fell through the superheated liquid. Same thing would happen is you used fine sand. Under those conditions, the salted water wins. However, that is not (or should not be) the way things are done.
http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/g ... n01021.htm
What is this experiment supposed to show?
Darren72 wrote:I thought the line "The pot receiving the salt will likely explode into violent boiling" was meant as hyperbole.
When you add salt to boiling water, you do get a quite noticeable boil-up, but I've never experienced any of the boiling water actually leaving the pot.
Darren72 wrote:Mhays wrote:There is one legit reason to add salt after the water has started boiling: it disperses and dissolves in the water more quickly, and is less likely to sit on the bottom and possibly corrode your pot.
This is correct, but the discoloration at the bottom of a pot is easily washed off and is harmless.
Darren72 wrote:Or are you saying that salt spots cannot easily be removed from aluminum?
LAZ wrote:Darren72 wrote:Or are you saying that salt spots cannot easily be removed from aluminum?
Yes.
lougord99 wrote:In many recipes that involve boiling a starch, potatoes or pasta etc, it calls for salting the water ( sometimes it calls for heavily salting the water ) before adding the starch. I know that salt raises the temperature of the boiling water, but is there another reason for the salted water?
d4v3 wrote:I always thought that adding salt had more to do with changing the electrolytic properties of the water.
imsscott wrote:d4v3 wrote:I always thought that adding salt had more to do with changing the electrolytic properties of the water.
Is there a benefit in changing the electrolytic properties of the water?
Santander wrote:imsscott wrote:d4v3 wrote:I always thought that adding salt had more to do with changing the electrolytic properties of the water.
Is there a benefit in changing the electrolytic properties of the water?
I spent many years trying to change the electrolytic properties of water to no avail. If only I had known.