oregonknl Posted March 18, 2005 Report Share Posted March 18, 2005 Fei and I are having a little disagreement.... She is of the Chinese cooking school which suggests that if you add a little too much salt to a dish, you can compensate by adding more sugar... essentially neutralizing the salt... Anyone from China know about this?? Link to comment
Dan R Posted March 18, 2005 Report Share Posted March 18, 2005 The sweet does not actually compensate for the salt. extra salt adds to the alkalininty. Both together changes the dish slightly and adds to undesirable dietary supplements. That said if it tastes good to you don't argue. Link to comment
ptcrusier333rph Posted March 18, 2005 Report Share Posted March 18, 2005 just shock he arguing with her on how to cook? trigg rule #1 wife is always rightTrigg rule # 2 wife own mop, read rule #1trigg rule #3 let wife win, bed be much warmer, read rule #1 robert you think they learn by now Link to comment
Trigg Posted March 18, 2005 Report Share Posted March 18, 2005 just shock he arguing with her on how to cook? trigg rule #1 wife is always rightTrigg rule # 2 wife own mop, read rule #1trigg rule #3 let wife win, bed be much warmer, read rule #1 robert you think they learn by now Yup, thems the rules!!!!!!! Link to comment
frank1538 Posted March 18, 2005 Report Share Posted March 18, 2005 A little too much salt? My wife never heard of too much salt. I have never used salt in any of my cooking, and it's been a real battle trying to get Jingwen to cut back on the amount of salt she uses. Fortunately, I have very low blood pressure. Jingwen also uses sugar in her cooking, but I don't know if it's too counteract the salt. One day at the store she picked up a bag a white crystals with Chinese writing on the bag (I can't read Chinese). I thought it was salt, but upon closer inspection I found out it was a one pound bag of MSG. It took me a while to explain to Jingwen why she should not use MSG in her cooking. Yes, Trigg, I had to put my foot down - right on that step leading to the dog house. Link to comment
Trigg Posted March 18, 2005 Report Share Posted March 18, 2005 I hear ya Frank. I'm trying to swap MSG for sugar. She no longer allows sugar in any form and my stepdaughter ratted me out when I told her that Butter Pecan ice cream is sugar free. She actually hid the sugar bag from me. My newest mission is to get her to cook without the shower cap pulled half way over her eyes (keeps smoke out of her hair me thinks) Link to comment
oregonknl Posted March 18, 2005 Author Report Share Posted March 18, 2005 Trigg, that must be one hot wak! She also wear her asbestos gloves when cooking? Be sure to remind her to step back during the flareups! (save them eyebrows!) Link to comment
BuffaloPaul Posted March 18, 2005 Report Share Posted March 18, 2005 My newest mission is to get her to cook without the shower cap pulled half way over her eyes (keeps smoke out of her hair me thinks)Seems like many Chinese love their shower caps. Jenny cannot imagine ever going to the beach without hers. Don't think her daughter will keep hers on too long Link to comment
tywy_99 Posted March 20, 2005 Report Share Posted March 20, 2005 Salt Goooooood................Sugar Baaaaaaaad!!!!!! Link to comment
Robert S. Posted March 20, 2005 Report Share Posted March 20, 2005 A little too much salt? My wife never heard of too much salt. I have never used salt in any of my cooking, and it's been a real battle trying to get Jingwen to cut back on the amount of salt she uses. Fortunately, I have very low blood pressure. Jingwen also uses sugar in her cooking, but I don't know if it's too counteract the salt. One day at the store she picked up a bag a white crystals with Chinese writing on the bag (I can't read Chinese). I thought it was salt, but upon closer inspection I found out it was a one pound bag of MSG. It took me a while to explain to Jingwen why she should not use MSG in her cooking. Yes, Trigg, I had to put my foot down - right on that step leading to the dog house.Right on Frank, put on your heaviest boots and then stomp down your foot against MSG. That stuff is really not good for you. I finally got Ping to come around to my way of thinking, almost, on the MSG issue. Now she will use only a pinch, and I am still fighting against that. I am not afraid of the dog house, over time I've got it fixed up pretty good in there, ashtrays all around, a nice little fridge full of beer, bags of peanuts, a small TV, what the heck. You got to stand up for what is healthy. It's weird the way they cook in a healthy way in some respects, for example with the flash cooking of vegetables which preserves the vitamins, then they put a factory made bit of poison in there like MSG. Link to comment
BuffaloPaul Posted March 21, 2005 Report Share Posted March 21, 2005 Seems like salt is much more dangerous than MSG. It always amazes me how many people will accept anecdotal evidence as fact. Some articles to read MSG FDA MSG Link to comment
se_lang Posted March 21, 2005 Report Share Posted March 21, 2005 Seems like salt is much more dangerous than MSG. It always amazes me how many people will accept anecdotal evidence as fact. Some articles to read MSG FDA MSGMy wife asked me about MSG I told her "No Way" then I read a few articles about it that said like everything us Americans do we changed our minds yet again about what is bad/good for us, so I removed my foot and MSG is now a regular part of our diet. Link to comment
Jeikun Posted March 21, 2005 Report Share Posted March 21, 2005 MSG is only really bad for certain people - at least as far as I know. I do lots of things bad for me to some extent, and hey we're all gonna die sooner or later. MSG is tasty. It's in. Link to comment
Dan R Posted March 21, 2005 Report Share Posted March 21, 2005 MSG affects some people but even those dont seem to react if it is added at low temp after cooking. That is why the main problem comes from soup boiled with the ingredient. Actually it is less risk than salt or tripolyphosphate that is added to commercial chicken and some other processed foods. Even those are not much problem unless you are at risk for congestive heart failure or trying to loose weight. The whole issue can be prevented by using mushroom powder or extract in cooking as a replacement for other flavor enhancers. It is often available at asian markets or health food stores. tripolyphasphate is a risk because it is used to bind water to meat to increase moisture to counter dryness and reduce cost by adding water. It does the same thing in the body but it has never been studied for risk other than to establish safety limits which only work if you don't eat such products often. If ypu eat out a lot you probably go over safe limits. This the government regards as your fault not theirs. Similar to using sodium nitrate/nitrite, it may be as big a cause of cancer as cigarettes but the government decided 70 years ago that is better than food poisoning from not having it in popular american foods like hot dogs bacon and ham. One was prohibited about 15 years ago because of health group lobbying but the body converts the other during digestion. All a game business first, health second. Link to comment
Trigg Posted March 21, 2005 Report Share Posted March 21, 2005 I have to say that in the past I tried the excersise/eat healthy thing. I have always been told that it will make me live longer but after endouring the hassles I'm quite convinced that it just makes it seem like a long time. Link to comment
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