I like making soups and porridges. I usually add salt and pepper at the beginning to add flavor. Recently, a friend gave me a bottle of soy sauce and Im experimenting with it.

What would it make more sense? to add the soy sauce with the other ingredients before the mix boils, while boiling or only to add it before serving?

Another question is: should I use salt if I use soy sauce? Apparently, this sauce has a lot of sodium.

  • @[email protected]
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    -110 months ago

    Adding salt in the beginning is a waste. Better to add salt at the end when you’re ready to eat. That way you won’t have to use as much.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        I didn’t wanna say it but yeah… this is terrible cooking advice and demonstrates a serious lack of core knowledge. It’s also utterly irrelevant to the topic of how to use soy sauce.

        • @[email protected]
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          10 months ago

          When I first started cooking, I never salted my food because I noticed no difference. Now I’ve begun salting food, but it’s generally so much that other people perceive it as oversalted, because only then do I see a difference. Maybe I’m salting too late (since most recipes have it as a last step)? What difference does it make to add salt at the end vs at the beginning?

    • @[email protected]
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      610 months ago

      This is also still a waste. I just mount a salt lick (himilian pink of course) at my dinner table and periodically give it at lick while eating. You activate the salt receptors on your tongue whilst consuming very little actual sodium this way.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        You activate the salt receptors on your tongue whilst consuming very little actual sodium this way.

        This makes it sound like it works…and that it’s a perfectly normal thing to do. I love it

    • amio
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      10 months ago

      No! What?

      Salt or no salt can hugely affect how things behave and “eat”, by drawing out moisture or a bunch of other mechanisms.