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salting a cutting board with silicon dioxide?

 
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atom



Joined: 19 Jun 2009
Posts: 2

PostPosted: Thu Jun 25, 2009 10:33 am    Post subject: salting a cutting board with silicon dioxide? Reply with quote

it seems that good practice in maintaining a wooden cutting board is salting it. the salt, apparently, sucks out moisture, flavor, and odor from the board while killing any bacteria.

all of the table salt [read: sodium chloride] i'm finding here in wellington NZ uses silicon dioxide as a free-flow agent.

would it be a good idea to not rub anything containing tiny bits of silica on my cutting boards, where it may meet with my knife blades?

silica vs. knife blade: silica wins.

i have to also imagine that this can't be good for anyone's teeth.

there's a few more places i need to look for table salt without the silica. in the meantime, are there any alternate suggestions?
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GaryProtein



Joined: 26 Oct 2005
Posts: 535

PostPosted: Sat Jun 27, 2009 2:10 pm    Post subject: Re: salting a cutting board with silicon dioxide? Reply with quote

atom wrote:
it seems that good practice in maintaining a wooden cutting board is salting it. the salt, apparently, sucks out moisture, flavor, and odor from the board while killing any bacteria.

all of the table salt [read: sodium chloride] i'm finding here in wellington NZ uses silicon dioxide as a free-flow agent.

would it be a good idea to not rub anything containing tiny bits of silica on my cutting boards, where it may meet with my knife blades?

silica vs. knife blade: silica wins.

i have to also imagine that this can't be good for anyone's teeth.

there's a few more places i need to look for table salt without the silica. in the meantime, are there any alternate suggestions?




Silicon dioxide? You mean as in SAND??

Use table salt. The reason salt is used to disinfect wood cutting boards, is that it is hygroscopic, soluble in water, and it acts to dehydrate cells. Silicon dioxide [sand] only gets wet and probably has little effect on bacterial cell walls.
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