Hi all, my name is Seedy and I’m new here at the forum although I have occasionally lurked in the past – there’s some great information here!
I have some questions about salt types – or rather I’m a little confused having just received a delivery of Pure Dried Vacuum (PDV) salt.
OK, I’m not completely new to charcuterie having made successful salami, bresaola, lomo, coppa etc. over the past few years. I am wanting to step it up a notch with some larger cuts (I have a whole pork leg arriving tomorrow) so I ordered a 12.5kg bag of PDV salt from Amazon UK (as recommended in the River Cottage curing book). In the past I have just used coarse sea salt from the supermarket but that works out comparatively expensive.
Anyway, I was under the impression that PDV salt was a pure product but it in fact contains an anti-caking agent (E535). It’s advertised as pure salt but looking closely at photos of all the different brands available on Amazon, they all contain anti-caking agent(s). This leaves me somewhat confused as I thought the whole idea of using a ‘pure’ product was to avoid such additives. And in the River Cottage book there are numerous references to using ‘PDV or other additive free salt’.
So my questions are:
- Is there such a thing as additive-free PDV salt??
- Is there any benefit to using PDV salt over other types? I don’t think I’ve seen PDV salt recommended anywhere other than in the River Cottage book.
- Is the 1.5kg bag of table salt with anti-caking agent costing 80p at my local Tesco any different from the PDV salt costing twice as much per kg?
- Is there any scientific evidence that anti-caking agents affect the taste or curing process in any way?
Tomorrow I want to start curing a Tyrolean speck-style ham (and smaller cuts too) so I need a reasonable quantity of salt for those. I’m not sure whether to return the PDV salt and go back to my usual coarse sea salt for now, or to use the PDV salt because - if it’s OK for the very successful River Cottage restaurants - then it must be OK for me.
Thank you for any insights.
Cheers!
Seedy