How exactly does salt enhance flavor?

I made a big ol’ crockpot of split pea soup today. I put in some onion, carrots, potatos, and 1/2# of ham.

Except for the ham, I added no salt. I reached my lifetime RDA of salt around age 25, so I figured this was a good place to cut some.

b-l-a-n-d

A dash of salt and WOW! Peas, carrots, and potatoes are not the most exciting flavors in the world, but add some of that crystaline white stuff and it sets my taste buds dancin’.

How does that work? Salt is a flavor, and yet it also brings out flavors. Or does it? What’s goin’ on here?

I don’t have an answer to your question, but I’m very strange about salt.

I understand what you say from buying low sodium canned foods, but I don’t really like salt.

If I can taste salt, i won’t enjoy the food. My wife and her in-laws love this chicken place that I can’t stand because EVERYTHING tastes of salt.

Sorry that this doesn’t answer your question, but I want to put my two cents in.

Hijacks are welcome here because salt is fascinating. Sometimes I like it, sometimes I don’t. For example, on fries? NO salt. Just pepper.

I, too, like it to the point of enhancement, but not tasting like it.

But, of course, junky snack foods are awesome with salt…

Yep, on fries and eggs, I only like pepper (actually, I like dill on fried or scrambled eggs).

However, I don’t like most salty junk food. I do like pretzels, but that’s about it.

Some info on salt. The Many Benefits of Salt, by Lynn A. Kuntz. Scroll down to "shaking up the flavor.

Because we have taste buds for salt. Most of taste is from us actually smelling the food, as our tongue can actually only recognize five distinct flavors:

sweet
sour
bitter
salty
unami/savory/protein/MSG

Most foods will activate one or more of those types as well as stimulate your olfactory sense, which accounts for the overal “taste” of the food. The more taste buds that get activated, the better things taste, since you get more signls to your brain telling you that you are eating something good (altough odds are the bitter taste bud actually developed to tell us when things are bad to eat.)

Some stuff I stole from a couple of sources:

You should check out Salt. It’s a fascinating and fun read.

Salt is a natural flavor enhancer, it’s the monosodium glutamate that you want to avoid.

Salt’s a preservative, not a spice, and doesn’t add any flavour. There are those, I suuppose, who use it as a flavouring, but there are also those who like Budweiser beer. No accounting for taste.

Not true. Glutamate is also a natural flavor enhancer, for one thing (it’s in asparagus and tomatoes among other things - parmesan cheese is chock full of it), and scientific evidence shows that there’s generally nothing wrong with eating MSG.

Simply not true. Have you read any of the cites? Salt adds taste by enhancing flavor and has a taste of its own because of the receptors in our taste buds.

Eh? Sorry to display my ignorance (and that of Chambers Dictionary) but what’s “unami” when it’s at home - other than being what I must assume is something savoury in taste?

It’s basically the Japanese term and it has been picked up, I believe, because in America, we don’t really understand the term “savoury.”

Correct. It’s just another name for the taste/sensation that we get from eating foods with a lot of protein, like meat and fish. This is the taste bud that is also activated by MSG. It has only recently (compared to other taste buds) been discovered/confirmed.

I second that emotion.

From Wikipedia:

MSG is a stabilized form of glutamic acid, an amino acid that’s present in many other foods and causes the taste sensation of umami. This article describes the history of MSG.

And break the habiot of a lifetime?? Certainly not!

Or use preview, and break another habit…