Table Salt
The ubiquitous fine white salt in every kitchen. Highest density, usually iodized, perfect for baking — yet somehow looked down upon by food snobs.
What Is Table Salt?
Table salt is refined sodium chloride ground to uniform fine crystals, typically fortified with iodine and treated with anti-caking agents. It's mined from underground salt deposits (halite) or produced from evaporated seawater, then heavily processed to remove minerals and achieve consistent grain size.
The cubic crystals measure approximately 0.3mm, making it the finest commonly available salt. This ultra-fine grain and high density (twice that of Diamond Crystal kosher salt) means a little goes a long way — often catching home cooks off guard when substituting.
The Iodine Story
Iodine Content
Table salt contains 45 micrograms of iodine per gram (0.0045%). The recommended daily intake is 150 micrograms for adults, meaning about 3.3 grams of iodized salt provides the daily requirement. However, most dietary iodine now comes from other sources:
- Dairy products (due to iodine in cattle feed and sanitizers)
- Seafood (naturally high in iodine)
- Eggs (from iodine in chicken feed)
- Bread (some use iodated dough conditioners)
Additives Explained
| Additive | Purpose | Amount | Safety |
|---|---|---|---|
| Potassium Iodide/Iodate | Iodine fortification | 0.006-0.01% | Essential nutrient |
| Dextrose | Stabilizes iodine | 0.04% | Simple sugar, safe |
| Calcium Silicate | Anti-caking agent | 0.5-2% | Inert, safe |
| Sodium Aluminosilicate | Anti-caking agent | 1-2% | FDA approved, safe |
| Sodium Ferrocyanide | Anti-caking (Europe) | 0.0025% | Safe at these levels* |
*Despite the scary name, sodium ferrocyanide is safe and doesn't release cyanide under cooking conditions.
Density: Why It Matters
Salt Density Comparison (grams per teaspoon)
Table salt's high density means you need less by volume. One teaspoon of table salt equals:
- 2 teaspoons Diamond Crystal kosher salt
- 1.25 teaspoons Morton kosher salt
- 1.1 teaspoons fine sea salt
When to Use Table Salt
✓ Baking
Fine grain ensures even distribution in doughs and batters. Most baking recipes assume table salt unless specified otherwise.
✓ Table Service
Flows perfectly from shakers. The anti-caking agents prevent clumping in humid conditions.
✓ Precise Recipes
Consistent density makes volume measurements reliable. Every teaspoon is exactly the same.
✓ Dissolving Quickly
Fine crystals dissolve almost instantly in liquids. Good for brines that need immediate dissolution.
✗ Pinch Seasoning
Too fine to pinch effectively. Slips through fingers making it hard to control amount.
✗ Finishing
Dissolves too quickly on food surface. No textural interest or visual appeal.
The Anti-Caking Debate
Anti-caking agents prevent salt from clumping in humidity but can affect performance in certain applications:
Effects of Anti-Caking Agents:
- Cloudiness: Can make brines slightly cloudy (purely aesthetic)
- Taste: Some claim a metallic aftertaste at high concentrations
- Pickling: May slightly cloud pickle brine (doesn't affect safety)
- Performance: No impact on salt's ability to season or preserve
Table Salt in Baking
Table salt is the baker's choice for good reasons:
Why Bakers Prefer It:
- Even Distribution: Fine crystals disperse uniformly throughout dough
- Quick Dissolution: Dissolves completely even in low-moisture doughs
- Consistent Density: Volume measurements are reliable
- No Pockets: Won't create salty spots like coarse salt can
- Recipe Standard: Most baking recipes assume table salt
Salt's Role in Baking:
- Controls yeast fermentation rate
- Strengthens gluten network
- Enhances flavor (especially sweetness perception)
- Improves crust color through Maillard reaction
- Extends shelf life by reducing water activity
Common Misconceptions
"Table Salt Is Less Natural"
All salt is sodium chloride. Table salt is refined to remove other minerals, but the base compound is identical to sea salt or kosher salt. "Natural" is a marketing term, not a chemical distinction.
"Iodized Salt Tastes Bad"
In normal cooking amounts, iodine is undetectable. The "metallic" taste people report usually comes from using too much salt, period. In blind taste tests, most people can't distinguish iodized from non-iodized salt in prepared foods.
"Anti-Caking Agents Are Dangerous"
The amounts used (1-2%) are far below any level of concern. These compounds are inert and pass through the body unchanged. The names sound scary but the chemistry is safe.
Table Salt Varieties
Regular Iodized
The standard supermarket salt. Contains iodine and anti-caking agents. Best all-purpose choice for most home cooks.
Non-Iodized
Same fine grain but no iodine added. Preferred for pickling and fermenting where iodine might discolor or affect fermentation.
Popcorn Salt
Extra-fine grain (almost powder) that adheres better to popcorn and other snacks. Sometimes called "flour salt."
Canning/Pickling Salt
Pure sodium chloride without iodine or anti-caking agents. Same fine grain as table salt but produces clearer brines.
The Bottom Line
Table salt is unfairly maligned in food circles. Yes, it lacks the tactile pleasure of kosher salt for cooking and the visual appeal of flaky finishing salts. But it's the most reliable salt for baking, the most convenient for table use, and provides essential iodine for those who need it.
The additives are safe, the density is consistent, and it costs a fraction of specialty salts. For many applications — especially baking — it's not just acceptable but optimal. Don't let salt snobbery prevent you from using the right salt for the job.