Fish brings briny savory depth that contrasts with salt, maldon's sweeter, fresher, richer, or creamy qualities.
salt, maldon
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A British pyramid-flaked sea salt from Maldon, Essex — with distinctive hollow pyramid-shaped crystals that provide a satisfying crunch and moderate, clean sal…
3 pairings
Editorial
Flavor profile
Maldon Sea Salt is produced through a traditional method of boiling and evaporating seawater from the Blackwater estuary in Essex — the result is hollow, irregular pyramid-shaped crystals that are lighter and more delicate than fleur de sel but have a distinctive crunch when bitten. The flavor is clean, moderately salty without sharp edges, with a mild minerality from the sea source. Unlike fleur de sel, Maldon is dry rather than slightly moist — it stores easily without caking. As a finishing salt, Maldon is used for its textural crunch on steak, fish, roasted vegetables, chocolate chip cookies (the salted chocolate chip cookie renaissance was significantly enabled by Maldon's availability), caramel preparations, and cheese. It dissolves into food just as quickly as finer salts but provides a brief moment of pure salt texture. Maldon has become so ubiquitous that it represents a style — coarser, crunchier, cleaner than fleur de sel — rather than a single product.
Pairings
Flavor relationships
Pairs well with
fish
Fish brings briny savory depth that contrasts with salt, maldon's sweeter, fresher, richer, or creamy qualities.
finishing dishes
Finishing Dishes complements salt, maldon by adding contrast, depth, or texture without overwhelming the ingredient's main character.
lobster
Lobster brings briny savory depth that contrasts with salt, maldon's sweeter, fresher, richer, or creamy qualities.
Finishing Dishes complements salt, maldon by adding contrast, depth, or texture without overwhelming the ingredient's main character.
Lobster brings briny savory depth that contrasts with salt, maldon's sweeter, fresher, richer, or creamy qualities.