Why did they start putting salt in caramel?

Why did they start putting salt in caramel?

it tastes better

Because the modern palate has become accustomed to everything being heavily salted as a result of the high volume of processed foods in the average diet.

Because flavour contrasts are nice

They? Who? Surely you're not fucking retarded enough to think this is new just because it's popular

probably starbucks

remember that a thing isn't real until a shit-tier fast food chain starts selling it in flyover country, at which point it's a "meme" and you're not allowed to eat it anymore

Sweet and salty is a complementary combination. Plus most things taste better with at least a little salt added.

Caramel IS kind of boring on it's own. Toffee is much better and salting the caramel gives it a more toffee-like flavor.

>Had to reword my post twice because the system thinks it's spam.
>This comes through fine.

Isn't salted caramel just made using salted butter?

Dude, salt has always been heavily used in every cuisine since like forever. Ever since humans discovered that salt is a preservative and prevented people from getting sick from rotten food, it's been in literally everything. Didn't roman soldiers get paid in salt?

>Salt
>Literally the most used and valued spice
>Used for thousands of years
>The bases of many cultures
>Potentially one of the most important ingredients used in cooking
>Needed to even be alive

You're right, Salt is a meme

But you are interfering with his goyology. He's training for the goyolympics after all. Be a goybro and check your privilege.

all the salted caramel shit ive had has been too salty

It is not worth trying to understand food fads like eating chia pet seeds.

modern people smoke qnd eqt so much shit their tongue become wasted and unable to taste anything that isn't brain rotting strong.

Salt always makes sweets taste better. The trick is to add enough salt so that you can just barely detect the saltiness.

"caramel au beurre salé" is a traditional French specialty , first recipe mentioned in a cookbook around 1946...

There's quite a bit of debate about this subject, actually. Some say it's a recent additions, Others say that's the way it was originally made. I learn towards the latter camp. There's records of an old Arabic caramel confection referred to as kurat ahmil (translating roughly to sweet ball of salt, implying both its age and its origins)

Because it's tasty as fuck famalam.

it is a breton delicacy that has been around for a long time.

in the last 20-30 years savoury elements in sweet dishes have become quite fashionable. this is partly due to salted caramel itself but also because celebrity chefs have spread the word about salt 'transforming' flavours, removing bitterness and so on.

don't forget that almost any cake or cookie recipe you make has salt in it. it's generally there for taste, not texture.

Close, but no, sweet and sour are complimentary, as are salt and bitterness (hence the reason people put salt on grapefruit to make it taste better).
Poorly made caramel has a bitter aftertaste to it as a byproduct of cooking the sugar, so they started adding salt to it to mask the fact they couldn't make good caramel.

tl;dr Carmel has salt to hide a foul aftertaste

EVERYTHING tastes better with a pinch of salt.

DON'T EVEN TRY to prove me wrong.

Look at this guy and his historical accuracy. You're right of course, hell even salted caramels are old news. They were indeed by Henri Le Roux in like 60s or 70s. I love how these flyover anons get annoyed like it's some new trendy idea.

>Breton delicacy

I know you're probably talking about Brittany, but still

He's right, you know.

I visited some people in Rennes and they not only claimed that salted butter was invented in Bretagne, but that it was a regional delicacy that you couldn't find elsewhere.

I don't think they traveled much.

Probably an attempt at making caramel less disgusting. Didn't work out very well but I guess it was a slight improvement for some people.

Salt neutralizes bitterness. This is why it's used in dispersable aspirin and other painkillers