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Table Salt Cones

Table Salt Cones
Here is a different way to serve salt to your guests with their meal.
Each guest has a small dish with a delicate cone of slightly hardened salt by their plate. When they want some salt, they pinch some off the cone and rub it between their fingers, sprinkling it on their food.
I've experienced this at several of the nicer restaurants in San Francisco, and wanted to try it for myself. Here are the results of my experiments.
 
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Step 1Materials

You will need:
a cup of Kosher salt - you should use a salt with course grains, but not too heavy
water
CLEAN paper - this will be in contact with one of your condiments
tape - to hold the paper in a cone shape
cups, spoons for mixing and holding
a microwave - to dry these out
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23 comments
Nov 3, 2010. 9:32 AMnerdmom920 says:
This is awesome. I am researching handmade gifts to give for Christmas and a small box full of these would be perfect!
Aug 6, 2009. 8:37 AMThoth says:
Parchment paper might work better than notebook paper and is made to be cooked with so it will not have any potentially distasteful or even possibly harmful chemicals found in notebook paper like bleaching agents, dyes etc.
Nov 21, 2007. 9:18 PMGorillazMiko says:
imagine eating it all, that would be so nasty and weird in your mouth!
Mar 17, 2008. 9:31 AMmartian742 says:
Average lethal dose for adult person is 100g. So don't kill yourself.
Jul 31, 2009. 11:29 AMnatethegreat88 says:
There's a lethal dose for salt?
Aug 1, 2009. 12:54 AMwupme says:
There's a lethal dose for everything, even for sugar or water.
Jul 31, 2009. 4:41 PMnatethegreat88 says:
That's kinda scary that something like table salt could kill with 100g.
Oct 12, 2009. 2:14 PMred-king says:
 think about it though. who's going to sit down and eat 200g of salt?
Oct 13, 2009. 1:09 AMnatethegreat88 says:
True, but thats weird that something you use about everyday could kill you. But then theres also a bunch of other stuff that could kill me, that i do everyday.
Oct 19, 2009. 6:08 PMred-king says:
 theres lots of things that could kill you... anything could really... it's almost amazing that a lot of people don't die from some things...
Nov 22, 2007. 6:04 PMTangMu says:
Would it be possible to make a sugar varient of this? It would make an interesting alternative to sugar cubes. The browner sugars have atendancy to have a larger grain size and so would have the same texture perhaps... I'm just a little worried what microwaving the sugar would do... perhaps a warm oven might be safer and more gradual.
Feb 9, 2009. 7:39 PMMama B says:
If I remember correctly, the old Easy Bake Oven kits used to come with sugar molds for making old-fashioned cake decorations. They were just hard plastic shapes, but you could easily use chocolate molds you can find anywhere. To make the sugar mixture, just add a few drops of water at a time to sugar (can also add color, but it came out pretty mottled), mixing in just enough to squeeze some in your hand and it will firmly hold its shape. It should be similar to damp sand you find at the beach. Anyway, I think you had to spray with a very thin coating of non-stick spray before packing in the sugar mixture tightly. Gently release sugar shapes from mold onto a baking sheet. Dry (not bake) sugar in barely warm oven (200-250 degrees F) with the door slightly ajar until thoroughly dehydrated. Of course, you could also do this in a dehydrator of you have one. These will store virtually indefinitely if kept in a completely air-tight container away from moisture.
Nov 27, 2007. 11:44 PMjongscx says:
With brown sugar, you should probably just pack it into the cone and not cook it. Sugar has a lot of water in it already, especially brown sugar. Heating it (as you already mentioned) caramelizes it. I guess if you wanted to, you could lightly use a blowtorch to make a hard shell on the outside... maybe.
Nov 23, 2007. 6:03 AMTangMu says:
Oooh they look fun. would be great for a grim fandango themed night. Balloon puppetry ahoy!!
Mar 21, 2008. 3:18 PMFull Frontal Graphic says:
Way cool way to present the salt. Classy and dramatic Easy to see how much salt you actually use, not like some unfamiliar salt shaker.
Nov 22, 2007. 8:27 AM!Andrew_Modder! says:
lol ok
Nov 22, 2007. 5:50 AMQuiznak says:
If you were making several of these a test tube rack might be a good way to hold them in the microwave (obviously not a metal rack).
Nov 21, 2007. 9:22 PMUshanka says:
Can you take the excess unused salt and reuse it in more cones?

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