So now that the headache myth has been thoroughly debunked what are some good uses for MSG?
Is it a salt replacement? Do I use it with salt?
So now that the headache myth has been thoroughly debunked what are some good uses for MSG?
Is it a salt replacement? Do I use it with salt?
Yes you use it in place of salt and don't make the mistake of thinking you can use 1 to 1 measurements either. Also it can give you a headache but so can too much salt. Too much MSG is just more palatable when you eat it.
I put a tiny pinch in with any recipe that involves protein. Makes meats meatyer.
>you use it in place of salt
No, in addition to salt.
Actually, everything you said is retarded.
you know what the 'S' in msg mean?
MSG is a sugar that behaves and tastes like a salt.
S=Sodium... like in... Salt!
my fucking sides its an amino acid
you nigger, do you know what O in co2 stands for, does that mean you can just breathe co2, does the fact that my red blood cells have iron in them mean i can make a sword from my own blood, fucking bleach is just NAClO, sodium-hypochlorite can you use that as a salt replacement or breathe it in for that matter?. This triggers my autism to no ends
Anybody else try msg with porridge? Didn't really turn out well and had a funny aftertaste that still makes me feel sick thinking about it.
I season first and then add a teaspoon/pinch depending on the size i'm cooking. I think it works best if you have a lot of fat though, at least from my experience.
You make a mixture of salt
I sprinkle it on my food instead of salt
It is the salt of an amino acid
I sprinkle some on my door to ward off vegans and lefty activists
These signs pretty much mean "no flavor". This is what scientific illiteracy can do.
you actually could probably make a knife from enough blood if your autism is powerful enough
According to google, you need to collect the iron from the blood of 3~500 men to have enough to make a longsword.
long time MSG cook here
I'l run through the main points as I see them
it's salty, but not as salty as pure salt
so usually I call it around 3/4 strengh
substituting it at 1:1 for salt will see you using too much, or under-seasoned food
this is relevant mainly in large batch cooking
unlike salt, too much MSG becomes unpleasant much more quickly
I would recommend 1tsp per pound of meat, and maybe 1-1/2 tsp for vegetables
it really brings out the sweetness in veg, so be careful of that
this also means more care has to be used when dispersing it
DO NOT USE IT AS A TABLE CONDIMENT
fucking junkies
palate saturation can be an issue, so don't put it in every element of a dish (same goes for people who put salt or chilli in everything)
this means going easy seasoning soups/stews with MSG
be careful using it with food already high in MSG, seaweed dishes, hard cheeses, tomatoes etc
similarly using it when pre-made ingredients like sauces have MSG
I am a big chinese cook, and it can be hard ot avoid using two sauces, a preserve and a condiment that all contain MSG
many chefs are dead against it, but I think it has more to do with reputation and personal pride than objection to MSG it'self
like a plasterer getting pre-fab cornice, or a painter getting laser marked guidelines on a canvas
I usually replace half the salt with MSG
What was the USA product that's like half salt,half MSG called again?
how to use msg
step one: throw it in the trash
It doesn't stand for salt, jackass. Sodium doesn't mean anything for taste.
I bet there's a guy who's done this in a manga or something.
accent
the guy was replying to this post >in addition
I think meant that adding sodium from MSG to sodium from salt might not be healthy and that it would probably be wiser to split it somehow so that the sodium content of the final meal is the same as it would be if no MSG was added.
Anyhow, when do you add MSG? Do you add it after the meal is finished and just stir it in or do you add it in the beginning of the cooking, in the middle... I mean does it break down somehow in high heat and can it produce off flavor or it does not matter when you add it?
Good goyim
Sodium isn't the same thing. There are already tons of posts in this thread elaborating on this.
I bet you're a troll.
pro-tip: those restaurants just put the signs up so retards won't flee. They still have tons of MSG in the food.
Same as salt.
Flavor while cooking, add to taste.
>take thousand million iron supplements
>get mri
>???
>profit
pro tip
that's illegal
it has become essential to me for pretty much anything involving ground meat. meat filling for pelmeni and piroshki, burgers, meatballs, etc.
see CookingInRussia on youtube. he uses msg appropriately.
Seikon no Qwaser