BrainStuff Classics: How Does Salt Prevent Food Spoilage? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: How Does Salt Prevent Food Spoilage?

Oct 25, 20203 min
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Episode description

Salt has kept entire civilizations alive thanks to its abilities to preserve food and protect it from harmful germs. Learn how in this classic episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, Lauren Vogel Bomb here with another classic episode from our archives. As we're in the midst of the fall season here in the United States, many people are starting to think about holiday feasts, perhaps including a brined turkey or a ham cured with salt. Aside from being tasty, these preparations helped preserve meat. Here's why, Hey

brain Stuff, Lauren Vogel bam here, let's talk salt. You might toss a little over your left shoulder for good luck, sprinkle some on your eggs, or even tip a shaker into a frothy beer. However you use it, one thing's for certain. Most of us take salt for granted. Salt wasn't always such a simple matter. For centuries, it was a rare commodity, used as payment, as an impetus for wars,

and often for survival. Salt preserved fish and ancient Egypt seasoned Roman salad dressings, and even came to stand for a measure of a person's integrity. A competent Roman soldier was worth his salt, had earned his allowance of the valuable seasoning. But more than being tasty, salt kept entire civilizations alive thanks to his ability to prevent foods from turning into bacterial Latin killers. To understand how salt prevents foods from spoiling, it's important to first grasp how it's

used to preserve foods. Salt is used in two primary ways, either in granule form or in brine form, a brine being a water and salt solution. A ham, for example, might be cured with salt, and cucumbers are preserved and turned into pickles with brine. Curing with salt granules, known as dry curing, means applying salt to the outside of a cut of meat and storing it for a couple of days up to several weeks. It's one of the most ancient ways of curing meats. Modern curing can involve

injecting meat with salt brine. Whatever the form of salt it's used, the mineral preserves foods and makes them safer to eat by preventing bacteria from growing, including the bacteria that break down rotting food and also food board pathogens such as salmonella, which can cause food poisoning, typhoid eiver, and other serious problems. Salt inhibits bacteria in a variety of ways. It's a disruptor that reeks havoc in microbes,

interrupting their enzymes and chipping away at their DNA. It most often works through dehydration, though removing many of the water molecules the bacteria need to live and grow. Water molecules and food are measured in terms of product water activity, a number that signifies the free water molecules present before salt preservation. Many fresh foods have point nine nine product water activity. The product water activity is lowered when salt

dehydrates the food through the process of lasmosis. In essence, the salt around the outside of the food draws water molecules out and replaces them with salt molecules until the amount of salt is equal inside and out, lowering the water product activity to point nine Ford point nine one is usually sufficient to prevent most bacterial growth. Today's episode was written by Laurie L. Dove and produced by Tristan McNeil Entiler Clang. For more on this lots of other topics,

visit how stuff works dot com. Brain Stuff is production of iHeart Radio. For more podcasts from my Heart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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