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The beauty of salt is that it’s full of bounty. Every salt offers food … and affords your eyes, nose and mouth an experience all its own. The right salt at the right time diminishes bitter and sour tastes and accents sweet and umami sensations. Whenever you’re salting your food, it works best to think of salt as a strategic ingredient – what do I want to accomplish with this dish, and what salt can help accomplish that best? When you salt strategically, you unravel the majesty, unlock the flavor, and enhance the vibrancy of your food.
Flake salt with salad is a revelation. Salt flakes are typically wide and thin, giving them a much larger surface area than fleur de sel, sel gris, or traditional salts to disperse their seasoning. As a result, flake salts release a bright, quick, snap of salt without overwhelming delicate greens. When you take a bite, the flakes explode and vanish, like all-natural Pop rocks.
Did you know that salt was actually the original salad dressing? The word “salad” comes from Latin salata, short for herba salsata “salted vegetables,” and salad is still one of the foods that benefit most from salting. Finish your salad with a flake and you hold all the power; you can unlock the create a layered and dynamic experience. The pyramidal crystals pop against delicate greens and chopped vegetables with intense but fleeting flavor – a lacework of flaky salt dancing across the surface.
The best salads are ones that are dressed with a homemade dressing or vinaigrette and united as one with veggies fresh from the garden, and deliberately salted by hand with the best flake salt. A well-balanced vinaigrette, with just enough acidity from the vinegar to counter the velvet luxury of the olive oil, and just the right tang from the mustard to counter the heat from the pepper, is crucial here. Most recipes call for a? 3 to 1 ratio of fat to oil. Sometimes I like my vinaigrette a tinge more acidic, and so my proportions often tend toward 2 to 1. Play around with the basic and you’re bound to find what suits you.
Hana Flake is a balanced, icy white Japanese salt that is particularly well suited for salads; a sprinkle of this salt on top will have your vegetables shimmering like glass, beautiful and sparkling, the snappy citrus vinaigrette popping with salt, and the delicate lettuce begging for more. Hana Flake is also beautifully suited to ceviche, foie gras, poached white fish (like halibut or cod) and cold soups like gazpacho, as its flattened pyramidal texture has a light, fresh Arctic air taste, cutting through foods like buttered glass.
Salad with Grapefruit Vinaigrette and Hana Flake Sea Salt
Serves 4
For the salad:
1 grapefruit, cut into segments
1 avocado, sliced or cubed
1/4 red onion, thinly sliced
1 head of green leaf or other lettuce
For the vinaigrette:
1 small garlic clove, minced
2 tbsp white wine vinegar
1 tbsp Dijon mustard
1 tbsp grapefruit juice
Crack of Parameswaran’s pepper
1/2 cup olive oil
Peel and mince the garlic. Place in small bowl or mason jar. Splash in the vinegar, squeeze in the grapefruit juice, then spoon in the Dijon mustard and stir to combine. Crack in some pepper, then slowly whisk in the olive oil, drizzling little by little until the dressing becomes smooth and thick.
To serve the salad, tear your lettuce and place in large bowl. the onion, avocado, and grapefruit. Drizzle your dressing over the salad and toss to coat. Serve on individual plates and sprinkle with Hana Flake right before eating.
You can find Hana Flake and other finishing salts for salad like Alaska Pure Flake and Halen Mon Silver at The Meadow’s online shop.
Salt-Frozen Parmesan Ice Cream with Tomato Marmalade and Basil Gremolata
Recipe adapted from the Mark Bitterman’s Salt Block Cooking.
Serves 6
For the Ice Cream
1 8x8x2 salt block or 9x9x2 salt block?
5 cups heavy cream
8 ounces Parmigiano Reggiano, freshly grated
For the Marmalade
1 pound plum tomatoes, peeled and coarsely chopped
? cup sugar
1? tablespoons sherry vinegar
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, use high-quality
For the Gremolata
12 fresh basil leaves, finely chopped
? garlic clove, minced
? cup chopped toasted hazelnuts
1 tablespoon finely grated lemon zest
To Finish:
2 tablespoons olive oil, use high-quality
Chill the salt block in the freezer for 6 hours before you want to finish the ice cream. To make the ice cream, bring the cream to a simmer in a large saucepan. Add the cheese slowly, stirring all the time, and continue to simmer and stir over low heat until the cheese has melted and the mixture is smooth, about 5 minutes. Pass through a strainer to remove any lumps, and let cool to room temperature. Put in a closed container and chill thoroughly in the refrigerator for several hours or overnight.
An hour before you want to finish the ice cream, put the container of ice cream mixture in the freezer.
To make the marmalade, cook the tomatoes, sugar, and vinegar in a medium saucepan, stirring frequently until lightly thickened, about 15 minutes. Stir in the olive oil and let cool to room temperature.
To make the gremolata, mix the basil, garlic, hazelnuts, and lemon zest together in a small bowl.
To finish the ice cream, put the frozen salt block on a rimmed baking sheet to catch any drips. Spoon half of the chilled ice cream mixture onto the frozen salt block, using a pastry scraper or the side of a spatula to control its flow. Scrape and fold the ice cream across the surface of the salt until it sets up. Scrape into a chilled bowl put in the freezer while repeating the process with the remaining half of the ice cream mixture.
To serve, scoop the ice cream into chilled bowls. Drizzle each serving with the olive oil, and top each with a spoonful of marmalade and a sprinkling of gremolata.
Find more recipes in Mark Bitterman’s Salt Block Cooking: 70 Recipes for Grilling, Chilling, Searing, and Serving!
Salt Crust Scallops with Thai Lime Dipping Sauce
Recipe adapted from the Mark Bitterman’s Salt Block Cooking.
Serves 4
1 9x9x2 salt block
? cup fresh lime juice
? cup Thai fish sauce
1 tablespoon rice wine vinegar
2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil
1 garlic clove, minced
1 hot chile pepper, such as bird chile, habanero, cayenne or Scotch bonnet, stem and seeds removed, minced
? cup finely shredded carrot
1? pounds large, wild-caught sea scallops (about 16)
? teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Place the salt block over low heat on a gas grill or stovetop for 10 minutes (see Read Before Heating, in Salt Block Cooking, pg. 25). Turn the heat to medium and heat for 10 more minutes. Raise the heat to medium-high and heat the block to about 600 °F, about 20 more minutes (see Getting It Hot, in Salt Block Cooking, pg. 24).
To make the dipping sauce, mix the lime juice, fish sauce, ? cup water, vinegar, sesame oil, garlic, chile pepper and carrot; set aside.
Pat the scallops dry and pull off their white gristly tendons if not already removed. Season the scallops with the black pepper and let stand at room temperature until the salt block is hot. When the salt block is very hot (you should only be able to hold your hand above it for just a few seconds), place the scallops on the hot block and sear until browned and springy to the touch but still a little soft in the center, about 3 minutes per side. Work in batches if your salt block cannot comfortably fit all the scallops at once.
Transfer to a platter or plates and serve with the dipping sauce. Enjoy!
Find more recipes in Mark Bitterman’s Salt Block Cooking: 70 Recipes for Grilling, Chilling, Searing, and Serving!
Bitterman’s Chocolate Fleur de Sel is an infused fleur de sel that’s been blended with chocolate. This salt, like many infused salts, is made using a fleur de sel (in this case, our house Fleur de Sel from Guatemala). It is then combined with high quality chocolate. This original recipe was concocted in 2008 by The Meadow’s owner Mark Bitterman, our house Selmelier and master infusion-mixer. This chocolate salt has a strong chocolate aroma with hints of cocoa that gives your food a deep richness and full-bodied flavor. The small, irregular crystals dissolve in waves across the palate, lending a delicate chocolate chip-like crunch to any dish. Sprinkle it on sweets, like strawberries and cream, hazelnut scones, cupcakes, fruit parfaits or homemade granola. Or anywhere you might make a mole, such as tender beef or chicken.
Or try using up your lingering winter carrots and spring into summer with this rooty Carrot Cake recipe!
Carrot Cake with Bitterman’s Chocolate Fleur de Sel
Serves 10
4 eggs
1 1/3 cups vegetable oil
2 cups white sugar
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons each baking powder and baking soda
1 teaspoon each cinnamon, allspice and nutmeg
3 cups grated carrot
1 cup each chopped walnuts and chocolate chips
2 two-finger pinches Bitterman’s Chocolate Fleur de Sel
Preheat the oven to 350. Grease and flour a 9×13 inch cake pan.
Crack the eggs in a large mixing bowl. Add the oil and sugar and beat together until nice and creamy. In a separate bowl, combine the flour, baking powder and soda, spices, and salt. Slowly add the dry ingredients to the wet, combining gently with a wooden spoon or spatula. Once incorporated, fold in the carrots, nuts and chocolate chips.
Pour the mixture into the pan and bake for 45 minutes. Let cool for 20 minutes and then top with your favorite frosting (we like cream cheese!) Sprinkle with Bitterman’s Chocolate Fleur de Sel and enjoy!
Curious about our other flavored salts? Take a peek at all of ‘em here!
The first salt produced?in what is now the United States was made, of course, by native people, though in many cases we don’t know?the particular techniques?used.
Spanish explorer Hernando?de?Soto observed people living along the Mississippi?Delta?boiling brine they made from salt dried on the sand. Avery Island, nestled in the Louisiana bayou, is home to the oldest known?saltworks?in North America?-?the people living there used broken pottery, some of which is carbon dated to 2500 BCE,?to make salt.?Along the East Coast, salt and the colonization of the eastern seaboard went hand in hand.?English sailors?made their first regular trips there?not to settle, but to fish.?And?explorers?Lewis?and?Clark?became?the first known men to produce salt?on the West Coast?during their epic expedition?of the early 19thcentury.
Today,?we’re seeing a resurgence of new American?saltmakers, making salt much?in?the same way?that?makers did centuries ago.?From Mendocino, California,?to Hawaii, from?rooftops in?New York City?to?the?small island of?Martha’s Vineyard off the coast of Cape Cod in Massachusetts.
Martha’s Vineyard Sea Salt,?a fairly new venture from husband and wife team Curtis Friedman and Heidi Feldman,?gets its unique mineral richness from the?waters surrounding the Atlantic Ocean?island.?Vineyard residents?Heidi and Curtis, a tech consultant and carpenter who started Down Island Farm on their Tisbury property,?started researching?sea?salt?a few years ago and formally launched theirs?in the spring of 2013.
Martha’s Vineyard Sea Salt?revives a?lost tradition on the?island, which, like many places in New England, has?a long, storied history in salt.?As far back as the late-1600s,?colonial?settlers began to produce sea salt on Martha’s Vineyard, also referred to as?Noepe?by the?Native?American?Wampanoag?tribe.?Residents of the Vineyard used?sea salt?to preserve and season food?and tan animal hides, all extremely critical to?survival. By 1807, salt manufacturing was the island’s second largest industry, but?it?declined after the War of 1812?when?large,?industrial companies?began popping up?along the coast. Since?that time, a few Islanders have produced sea salt for personal and even restaurant use,?but none have attempted to reintroduce 100% natural sea salt.?Martha’s Vineyard Sea Salt is the first known?saltworks?on the Vineyard?to produce sea salt commercially?since the?1800s.
Heidi and Curtis?use a?deceptively?simple evaporation process to produce?their?salt.?Every few weeks, they pump?sea?water?from the ocean into a plastic tank,?drive it back to their farm, and funnel it?into?a 76-by-12 evaporator Curtis built on the outskirts of their property.?Once the water is in, it’s just a matter of time?–?and sun.?Slowly (but surely), most of the water evaporates?until?only?residual salt granules?are left.?Heidi and Curtis?then rake the salt crystals by hand?and put them through a short dehydrator in small batches before packaging.
This salt is an honest expression of the island itself: wet and rocky and a tad non-traditional. The couple?seems?intent?to keep it that way. They’ve struck a beautiful balance,?negotiating between climate, process,?and history, letting the island do the work (with a pump or two at the beginning and a shake or two of the rake at the end). The resulting salt is one that’s fresh,?briney,?and abundant with minerals. . I use it on hearty meats, like beef and bison or on roasted vegetables, like potatoes with herbs, much like I would use a Sel Gris de L’Ile de Re or Pangasinan Star. I also like it mixed into hearty bean stews or chilis, or sprinkled on top of springy grain salads, like quinoa with apples, feta, scallions and a lemon vinaigrette. A pinch or two on rich, buttery baked goods like pretzels or crostatas is also wonderful.
The secret of this new American salt is out: locals are going crazy about?it,?chefs can’t seem to sprinkle enough on their dishes, and?media from half way around the world are knocking down the?evaporator?door to get their hands on some. And I happen to be over-the-moon about this American salt as well – the flavor of New England reverberating on the island, and across the country, stronger than ever.
You can find Martha’s Vineyard Sea Salt and other new American salts for sale at The Meadow’s online shop.
Island Photos courtesy Heidi Feldman.
Sel gris is a vehicle for exploring hearty and meaty foods. The name sel gris comes from the French gros sel grisor, which literally translates to “coarse gray salt.” Sel gris is distinguished by its coarse crystals and high moisture content, typically around 13%. This salt is made by raking crystals from the bottom of a crystallizing pan soon after they form, which gives them an irregular yet natural crystal structure. Hefty, moist crystals with a minerally saltiness make this a beautiful finishing salt for steaks, lamb, and root vegetables. It’s also the ultimate salt for pasta water, grilling meats, and can be ground up for baking or used for salt crusts.
A good steak needs sel gris.? A great steak needs to be cooked just to medium-rare and flecked with a beautiful gray salt, like Sel Gris de l’Ile de Noirmoutier. While comparable to Sel Gris de Guerande, this finishing salt has a slightly less moisture content, and is almost imperceptibly paler in color. The flavor differences between the Guerande and Noirmoutier are all but impossible to distinguish, though the Noirmoutier is just barely lighter bodied, striking that perfectly crunch on top of grilled steak. Explore the crunchy minerality this gray salt has to offer at your next meal. The moisture levels in this sel gris prevent it from overly dehydrating other ingredients,? and the crystal size lends a satisfying crunch to every bite, making it an ideal finishing salt for steak.
Flank Steak with Sel Gris de l’Ile de Noirmoutier & Parsley Pesto
Serves 4
For the steak:
1 lb flank or skirt steak
1 tbsp Almazara Luis Herrera Olive Oil
1 tbsp unsalted butter
Crack of Parameswaran’s pepper
2-finger pinch Sel Gris de l’Ile de Noirmoutier
For the Pesto:
1 bunch of flat leaf Italian parsley
1 clove of garlic
1/4 cup Parmigiano Reggiano cheese
1/4 cup of Almazara Luis Herrera Olive Oil
1-finger pinch of Meadow Fleur de Sel
In a large pan or cast iron skillet, heat oil and butter on medium-high heat. Lightly pepper your steak on both sides. Once the pan is hot and the butter is melted, add your steak and let cook for 3-4 minutes on each side, until medium-rare. Transfer the steak to a cutting board and let rest for 15 minutes, until cooled slightly. For the pesto, combine parsley, garlic, cheese and salt in a food processor. Pulse to combine, then turn to lowest setting and slowly drizzle in olive oil.
To serve, slice the steak against the grain and sprinkle with two-finger pinch of Sel Gris Noirmoutier. Scoop a spoonful of parsley pesto on top or serve on the side, if desired.
Sel Gris de l’Ile de Noirmoutier, Meadow Fleur de Sel, and a selection of other finishing salts can be found at The Meadow’s online shop.
You probably haven’t run across Kala Namak in the United States, but in India you can find it at just about any street corner food vendor. In its coarser rock forms, Kala Namak (“black salt” in Hindi) is a deep purplish-black color. Once ground, it becomes more of a pinkish-brown, and on your food, it takes on a redder hue. This color-shifting salt, however, leaves a longer lasting impression on the palate than on the retina.
The aroma and taste of Indian black salt are those of sulfur mined from the belly of a slumbering volcano, which in fact is not all that far from the truth. The base of Kala Namak is the more familiar Himalayan Pink salt from Pakistan; this is then melted down with several India spices, in particular harad or haritaki, the seed of the Black Myrobalan tree. The sulfur compounds in the harad seeds are what impart the unique flavor to black salt, as well as its healing properties. The brine is allowed to cool, and then stored to let the flavors meld. This process brings added complexity to the already mineral-rich Himalayan Pink salt, which by itself contains over 84 trace minerals.
Kala Namak is deeply entrenched in South Asian cultures. It can be traced back to the time during with the Vedic scriptures were written and today is an important component of ayurvedic medicine, where it is believed to alleviate digestive ailments. The harad fruit is also used in Ayurveda as part of triphala, an herbal elixir that is used to treat intestinal disorders as well as eye disease and to promote immune system health. Whether it works or not is beyond my domain of expertise, but from the comfort of my kitchen I can tell you that Kala Namak brings something unequaled to both traditional Indian dishes and more familiar fare. It brings a certain fullness to chutneys, and sweeter ones especially take on a quality of roundedness when spiced with this salt. Chaat masala, a spice mix used to enhance fried street food (chaat) and fruit salad, also commonly contains this salt alongside ingredients such as coriander, ginger, chili powder, and cumin. Jal Jeera, a refreshing summertime drink and appetite opener, is a minty, spicy-sweet concoction that also calls for Kala Namak as well as cumin and cilantro.
Kala Namak can bring the unique flavors of the subcontinent to more typical American dishes as well. I especially like it on popcorn; a generous pinch or two of this salt on freshly popped kernels really amps up this savory snack, lending a warm richness and subtle, sulfuric hints of egg with each bite (in the best possible way). Once you’ve had popcorn popped in butter or olive oil and shaken with finely ground?Kala Namak you’ll never go back to Pop Secret. You may even consider bringing a small rock of black salt and a salt shaver to the movie theater with you!
Popcorn with Kala Namak Salt
Serves 2 hungry people
2 tbsp canola or olive oil, for popping
1/3 cup popcorn kernels
2 tbsp olive oil or unsalted butter, for popcorn
3 two-finger pinches of fine Kala Namak
Put a large 3-quart pot on your stove top on medium-high heat. Place two tablespoons of oil in the pot, then arrange your kernels in an even layer at the bottom. Cover with a lid and shake gently back and forth, until all kernels are popped. Alternately, you can pop your kernels in any standard popcorn popper. If you’re using an air popper, omit the first two tablespoons of oil. Once the kernels are popped, drizzle the remaining two tablespoons of oil or melted butter on the popcorn, and sprinkle generously with Kala Namak.
This Indian black salt and other finishing salts can be found at The Meadow’s online shop.
Fleur de sel?is the ultimate cooking salt.? Distinguished by fine, glistening crystals in a pale shade of white, it’s best when sprinkled on food at the end of preparation.? The name “fleur de sel” means “flower of salt” in French. It is also known by the Spanish name “flor de sal” and the Italian “fiore di sale.” The most famous examples of this salt are French sea salts from the coast of the French Atlantic coast, where a thousand years ago Trappist monks perfected a salt making process that had been evolving for millennia across the pristine salt marshes. We use the term fleur de sel to describe the type of crystal and quality of salt. Fleurs de sel are produced around the world, including Portugal, Mexico, nhà cái tặng tiền cược miễn phí tháng Italy, and Philippines.
The most versatile of finishing salts, imparting an extraordinary level of complexity to food, fleur de sel gives your fingers the tactile pleasure of working with a super premium ingredient, and your taste buds gustatory pleasure of the fullest possible flavor in every recipe you prepare.? It works well on foods like fish, poultry, cooked veggies, eggs, or bread and butter.
The Meadow’s Fleur de Sel works beautifully on salted caramels.? The small crystals dissolve quickly on the tongue, pouring out a surge of salty intensity that’s backed by the buttery richness and creamy texture of the caramel. The resulting confection is one that’s flavorful, lusciously smooth, salty, yet sweet, and perfectly balanced on the tongue. The quality of?Meadow Fleur de Sel rivals any salt from the famous salt producing regions of Guérande or Camargue. Though many people believe that a fleur de sel must be from France, these caramels will show you that’s not the case.
Caramels with Meadow Fleur de Sel
Recipe adapted from the “Fleur de Sel and Smoked Salt Caramels” recipe in?Salted: A Manifesto on the World’s Most Essential Mineral, with Recipes.
Makes 32 caramels
1 cup heavy cream
5 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/4 cup light corn syrup
1/4 cup water
2 three-finger pinches Meadow Fleur de Sel, for finishing
Line an 8×8 inch square dish with wax paper and then slightly oil the paper. Combine butter and heavy cream in a small saucepan on low heat until it begins to simmer. Remove from heat and set aside. In a large saucepan, melt sugar, water, and corn syrup together on medium-high heat, until mixture dissolves, begins to bubble and turns slightly brown in color (350 degrees F on a candy thermometer).? Remove from heat and gently stir in the cream mixture. Place back on the burner and boil, stirring vigorously, until the mixture reaches 248 degrees F (about 10 minutes). Pour into prepared 8×8 dish, then let sit at room temperature until cooled and slightly firm. After 1 1/2 hours, invert dish onto cutting board. Peel off wax paper and cut into 1×2 inch rectangles. Sprinkle with fleur de sel and wrap in 4×5 inch wax paper squares.
Meadow Fleur de Sel and other finishing salts can be found at The Meadow’s online shop.
Salt accentuates sweetness, mutes bitterness, and reveals depth in the flavor of virtually any dish it touches. Salt also brings out the best in your coffee, from the strongest of black brews to the most elaborate of coffee drinks.
Salt comes in a huge variety of shapes and sizes, which has a tremendous impact on your coffee. Some crystals are dry and paper thin, while others are heavy, grey, and moist. The structure of the crystal will regulate how much salt hits your tongue and how quickly it dissolves. Flake salts, for example, dissolve quickly and go great with? more complex coffee drinks, like lattes. Fleur de sel has highly irregular crystals and a moderate amount of moisture and minerals, giving it a mellow taste and making it the best all-around finishing salt for coffee.
The best way to salt your coffee is to do so right before drinking. Swirl it in and dissolve it with a spoon, sprinkle it on top with your fingers, or rim the edge of the cup like you would a margarita. I recommend sprinkling one of the following five salts on your coffee the next time you find yourself reaching for a cup.
Shinkai Deep Sea – The best choice for all around coffee salting. This Japanese salt is made from seawater harvested from a depth of 2,000 feet, where the warm and cold currents of the Pacific Ocean collide to form the halocline, an area of high salinity that is especially rich in minerals like magnesium. This minerality gives Shinkai Deep Sea a shimmering, bittersweet flavor perfect for everyday salting.
Takesumi Bamboo – The most sophisticated salt for coffee. This is another Japanese deep-sea salt that has been packed into the hollows of bamboo and incinerated for three days and nights in a charcoal kilm. The end result yields a salt with a carbonated mouth-feel and a texture reminiscent of Pop Rocks.
Halen Mon Gold – Sprinkle it as a finishing touch atop the foam or crema of your coffee, swirl inside your mug with a spoon, or coat the rim. This phyllo-flakey smoked salt gives a bright, balanced, salted caramel effect to coffee and coffee drinks. Halen Mon’s exciting texture pairs with the woody smokiness of Welsh oak to create as salt that coaxes the nuances from virtually any dish it finds.
Fleur de Sel de l’Ile de Re – Sprinkle this rosy tinted salt atop froufrou drinks topped with whipped cream or added flavorings. Moist and extremely delicate, this salt adds a balanced mineral sophistication and a playfully salty presence to your cup.
Lemon Flake –?A frou frou salt for a non frou frou coffee, crush this salt between your fingers and sprinkle gently over bright, fruity Kenyans or the like. This giant Cyprus flake salt is infused with lemon juice and lends a bright, candy-sweet flavor to your favorite blend.
Shop our complete selection of finishing salts at The Meadow’s online shop.
Urban Sproule is New York city’s first ever rooftop sea salt.? Started by Sarah Sproule in the summer of 2012, this solar evaporated salt is completely hand made on a rooftop salt farm and Certified Kosher.? After noticing a gap in the local food market, Sarah started experimenting with making her own sea salt. What started as a fun hobby quickly became a working business, consisting of weekly meet ups with local fishermen Glenn and Charlie from a small Long Island fishery –American Pride Seafood. New York has never been home to a hand-harvested rooftop salt — until now.
Urban Sproule is identifiable by its relatively uniform grain size. Their firm, yet delicate crystalline structure lends a briny punch to food. If you adore flake salt like? Icelandic Flake or Halen Mon Silver, this is a great one to explore.? A tad less refined and snappy, this salt is a lighter and more delicate version of our Bali Kechil Pyramid.
If today is your day to pay homage to winter, do so with Urban Sproule. Briny, boxy crystals work beautifully on dark leafy greens like kale, collard, turnip and swiss chard. Think crispy kale salad with pepitas, bacon, olive oil and a sprinkling of this salt.? Or serve up your winter collard greens, sauteed in Burro Soresina and olive oil and topped with pickled onions, shaved manchego, with a touch of Urban Sproule.? Delicately salt your roasted vegetables like sweet potatoes, parsnips and carrots. Or take your reverence for winter one step further with a heaping bowl of elk chili or buffalo stew and a pinch of Urban Sproule.
From Sarah, owner of Urban Sproule:
What started as a fun experiment making local sea salt quickly became a full fledged rooftop salt farm. I was holding weekly cooking demos with the Union Square Greenmarket preparing seasonal dishes. At the end of every demo, before the tasting, I would finish the dish with some kind of salt; a typical salt that you could pick up at any NYC corner store. The recipe would usually start with an ingredient like butter from Millport Dairy or sunflower oil from Cayuga Pure Organics, only to be finished off with the aforementioned salt. I was so proud of every ingredient in each dish, not necessarily because of how it was cooked, but because of the fact that I knew where everything in that dish came from; potatoes from Berried Treasures Farm, the kale- from Lucky Dog Organics or the Womanchego cheese from Cato Corner Farm. Everything had a story, except for the most basic ingredient, an ingredient that every human on earth consumes and that to me, seemed to pose a problem. I wanted to season this wonderful food with a wonderful salt, so I set out to make my own!
I employed the help of local fishermen Glenn & Charlie of?American Pride Seafood?to gather water while fishing 30 miles east of Montauk, Long Island. It only made sense to us that our water come from the same environment that the freshest fish at market call home.?The ideal weather in September led to the first big harvest- 15 pounds of pure raw local sea salt in October 2012.
Word spread quickly and NYC’s first ever Rooftop & Raw Sea Salt was sold out! I quickly responded to the inventory dilemma like any Manhattan dweller would; build up, not out and the salt production was doubled. An 8×12 Evaporation House with rows of shelving now hold 500 evaporation trays of sea water that are filtered throughout the period from evaporation to crystallization. Every tray is then harvested by hand and the crystals are sun baked, on organic clay tiles that are locally made, and a few lucky ones are infused with seasonal ingredients from local farms. Every salt crystal is grown and hand packaged in New York City.
Want your own Urban Sproule? Find it at The Meadow’s online store.