Salt is always a nice addition to food if it;s used moderately and carefully. Seasoned salts are even better and wine salts add an entirely new dimension to dishes. Combining wine and sea salt creates a totally different flavor yet one that can enhance meats and vegetables.
The creation was the subject of today's Good Appetite Column in the New York Times Dining section. Melissa Clark decided to try this interesting combination of salt and a good vintage. She got the recipe from the man who basically created it, Chef John Eisenhart of Pazzo, in Portland Oregon. Chef Eisenhart has come up with an interesting rub or sprinkle for almost any meat , from fish to poultry to beef and lamb. He even has used it on squash. His earliest creations involved a darker wine mixed with sugar (along with spices and sugar)> Unfortunately making it with a dark red results in purple salt. It works better with a good fruity white such as gewurtztraminer.
Is it easy to create this tasty blend? It is. All you need is two cups of a fruity white wine along with the dry ingredients of thyme and lemon zest. A cup of sugar is also added to balance out the saltiness and probably to bring out the wine's fruitiness.The wine has to be reduced to a syrup , cooked over a low flame for twenty to thirty minutes.This reduction is then added with the dry ingredients to a food processor where it's pulsed two or three times. When it becomes the consistency of wet sand then take the wine salts and place them on a baking sheet. Leave out to dry overnight. Ms. Clark slathers the salt over pork loins before grilling but you can try the salt on a roast chicken as well. She also plans on sprinkling some on veggies such as tomatoes along with grilled swordfish
Wine and salt together may sound strange together. Yet combined to create a new seasoning they mesh perfectly.Make a batch today to add zest and flavor to your late summer barbecues.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
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