Google "Celtic Sea Salt", it's a salt your body needs!
Plus, water with celtic sea salt and lemons peices is a great electrolyte balance drink, and it tastes really great. I put celtic sea salt in my water every day and have for years, plus it's great for dogs and pets too, all animals need salt, they risk their lives for it in the wild, and celtic sea salt has 84 essential minerals and iodine is included, and it comes from the northern part of France.
You would however need to include potassium salt into your diet as well on occasion.
I guess salt is for health and not for taste.
I guess salt is for health and not for taste.
I wonder how they remove all that salt after the process?What is the manufacturing process of processed cheese?
The main raw material in processed cheeses is cheese itself, to which is often added other dairy products. The cheeses are usually pressed cheeses, both cooked and uncooked, but many other cheeses can be used in the mixture: soft cheeses, goat’s cheese, blue cheese etc.
The manufacturing process has several phases:
- Ripening of the cheeses in specialised areas until they reach the right level of maturity.
- Preparation of the cheeses, which are mechanically de-rinded, grated and mixed.
- The addition, in large vats, of several types of cheeses, other dairy products (cream, butter, liquid or powdered milk, milk serum, lactalbumin, lactoglobulin, casein etc.) emulsifying salts and melting salts. Spices and flavourings can also be added. To obtain a variety of tastes, young fresh tasting cheeses are added to riper cheeses and they influence the final taste of the cheese with their own particular tastes. The blend can also be enriched with a wide variety of flavourings: nuts, ham, olives, mushrooms, pepper, fines herbs, onions, eau de vie, seafood, meat etc.
The list of added ingredients is strictly regulated.
- The cooking and the mixing process results in a smooth creamy blend.
- Simple pasteurisation (90-95°C) is used for cheeses to be sold in temperate climates, using a short cycle, which is followed by sterilisation for those products that need to be kept for longer.
- Packaging is done automatically: the melted cheese is shaped either in the moulds or directly into the final packaging.
What is a soft cheese?
It is a ripe cheese whose mix is neither pressed nor cooked. It can be made from cow’s or goat’s milk, pasteurised or un-pasteurised. The milk is prepared with milk ferments and rennet to enable it to coagulate and form curd grains. The curds are then poured into perforated moulds where they drain of their own accord. Then the moulds are turned over and the cheese is salted on all sides. The cheese is then cultured with penicillium that will, with maturing, give it its white “bloom” (rind). Maturation lasts from 1 to 6 weeks depending on the product.
What is a cheese?
It is the result of the transformation of milk in a liquid state into a solid through coagulation; curdling, draining of the whey, and ripening depending on the cheese.
What are processed cheeses?
Processed cheeses are made from cheeses and other milk products using:
Hard cheeses, both young and ripened, milk, milk proteins, melting salts, flavourings, spices etc. All these ingredients are melted and then poured when hot into the final packaging.
What are hard cheeses?
They are a large family of cheeses with diverse characteristics that are made using identical methods. The milk, pasteurised or not, is prepared with milk ferments and rennet and is heated so that it coagulates rapidly and the curds are obtained. The curds are sliced and then stirred until they reach a granular consistency. It is then enclosed in cloths or in moulds and pressed hard to quickly remove the whey. The salting is undertaken using brine baths (salt) in which the cheeses sit, depending on the product, for a longer or shorter time. The cheeses are then dried and placed in moisture-controlled stores where they are washed and turned regularly.
The maturing is longer or shorter depending on the product to ensure that the flavour develops evenly throughout the cheese.
What is the dry matter in a cheese?
The dry material or dry extract is what is left when all the water that it contains has evaporated. The dry material is composed of proteins, fatty materials or lipids, sugars or carbohydrates, mineral salts and vitamins. It is therefore the nutritional part of the food....
Produits laitiers du groupe Bel : Fromage La vache qui rit, Babybel et Leerdammer
A lot of salt is used in processing cheese:
I wonder how they remove all that salt after the process?
I love cheeses. This thread is making me hungry.
Did someone say cheese?? :droolz:
Reba!!!! it make me :droolz: too...
Great thread Liebling! I've never needed low sodium diet, but my husband does due to high blood pressure. There were days I felt like gosh I need salt! I notice when my thyroid dose is a bit low I tend to increase salt sometime. Do you do that as well?
Yes my doctor recommend me to take an iodine salt. Iodine salt is good for thyroid function. I mixed herbs with iodine salt when I use on meals... That´s why I don´t use salt for cooking but use salt on the table for our meal. It´s no good if you use salt for cooking and then again salt on your meal. I drink a lot of water or soda water including low soduim then is less problem.
Reba!!!! it make me :droolz: too...
Yes my doctor recommend me to take an iodine salt. Iodine salt is good for thyroid function. I mixed herbs with iodine salt when I use on meals... That´s why I don´t use salt for cooking but use salt on the table for our meal. It´s no good if you use salt for cooking and then again salt on your meal. I drink a lot of water or soda water including low soduim then is less problem.
Ahh yes... iodine salt. I have forgotten about that. Thanks for reminding me and I should start using iodine salt and perhaps herbs. Does iodine salt taste like salt? Because I wonder why you add herbs on your meal?
Ahh yes... iodine salt. I have forgotten about that. Thanks for reminding me and I should start using iodine salt and perhaps herbs. Does iodine salt taste like salt? Because I wonder why you add herbs on your meal?
I love cheese too but i dont eat them everyday cuz
i know some of them do contain a lot of sodium and
im careful not to salt my food too much. But when we
go out to eat, its beyond my control cuz i know the cooks salt
the food before they are being served, I do salt my
french fries cuz i dont like ketchup, oh well.
Its interesting though, that i dont have high blood
pressure! My hubby does and it has increased some
so the dr had to increased his dosage on his med but
i think its mostly because of his smoking, not because
of his high salt intake. It could be both, though.
Your thread on reducing sodium in the diet is interesting,
Liebling!
Why do they add iodine to table salt?
I have a box of salt in the kitchen, and it says, "Iodized Salt*", and then at the bottom it says, "*This salt supplies iodine, a necessary nutrient". On the ingredient label is lists Potassium Iodine at a concentration of 0.006%. A quarter teaspoon of salt (1.5 grams) provides 67 micrograms of iodine, which is about half of the U.S. Recommended Daily Allowance for iodine.
The main reason that you need iodine is because of a gland in your neck called the thyroid gland. The thyroid gland produces two hormones (thyroxine and triiodothyronine) that your body uses during metabolism (see this article for details). Without these hormones you start to feel tired, depressed, cold, weak, etc. Iodine is an important element in these two hormones, so without iodine your thyroid gland cannot produce them. When starved for iodine, the thyroid gland also swells, and when it does it is called goiter (see this page for a picture).
Your body doesn't need or contain very much iodine. You might have 20 to 25 milligrams of iodine in your entire body right now. However, in some parts of the world the soil contains no iodine, so the plants contain no iodine and therefore iodine deficiency is a problem. In the U.S., one part of the country that lacks iodine is the Great Lakes region. So companies started adding iodine to salt in the 1920's to eliminate goiter and thyroid problems.
If you lived through the cold war, you may have heard about the practice of taking iodine pills during the threat of a nuclear attack. When a nuclear bomb explodes, one substance it forms is radioactive iodine. If you eat, drink or inhale this isotope, your thyroid gland will concentrate it and this can lead to thyroid damage or cancer. By taking an iodine pill, you saturate the thyroid gland with iodine and prevent it from absorbing the radioactive iodine.
Howstuffworks "Why do they add iodine to table salt?"
...In the United States, salt producers cooperated with public health authorities and made both iodized and plain salt available to consumers at the same cost. Newspapers urged people to use iodized salt for the prevention of iodine deficiency. The Michigan program was highly successful and iodized salt use quickly spread throughout the country. Ultimately, household use of iodized salt eliminated iodine deficiency in the North America. In 1955, researchers reported that 75.8% of U.S. households used only iodized salt. The Salt Institute estimates that nearly 70% of the table salt sold in the United States is iodized...
Iodized Salt