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I listed it because it's something I always have around (thus I consider it a staple), but like dried legumes and masa harina, I don't buy it every grocery trip, only when I'm running low. I gift homemade candy for Christmas... there's no way a bag of sugar would do me more than a year. A box of sugar cubes (which we have in order to make old-fashioned cocktails when the mood strikes), could last for years.
OK, I buy/use it so rarely that I don't even think about it. Salt is in the same category for me.
You don't salt your food when cooking?
Hmm, looking at these, I think we should do more bean meals. I don't really know any, maybe I'll start a new thread about it.
I could give you endless bean recipes We eat beans as our main source of protein here. Lots of lentils. They cook fast and easy without presoaking. I salt my food because when i make soup (usually a batch a week) i do not use broth, i use water. I also have horribly low blood pressure and they only advice given to me was MORE SALT. Oy.
Lentils are so easy to make in the rice cooker.
But then you have to eat them. That's the hard part.
No. Never.
Really? Salt is such a fantastic flavor enhancer. Do you have high blood pressure?
1! and I am always told to eat more.
No, no HBP. My parents did, and that is how I never learned to add salt. There is enough sodium in canned beans, bread, bagels and other stuff that I get enough.
I wasn't thinking so much about getting "enough" (because yeah, the processed stuff you just mentioned has plenty of sodium), but salt makes such a big flavor difference in recipes. If you're used to it though, it probably won't be anything you would miss. I have low blood pressure and sweat like a Turkish prisoner when I'm running so sodium is not a concern for me.