Most of what is written about culinary salt is either marketing or received wisdom. The claim that pink Himalayan salt delivers 84 trace minerals your body needs survives in every health-food aisle despite being chemically misleading. The instruction to salt pasta water “salty as the sea” would produce inedible food if followed literally. The label “uncured — no nitrates added” on deli meat is legally required language that is also chemically false.

This library is a set of research dossiers on the salts a home cook actually encounters, covering history (told chronologically), food science (sourced to peer-reviewed literature and regulatory documents), practical handling, cost analysis, and — on the buying-guide page only — specific brand recommendations with honest tradeoffs.

The curing-salts topic is the safety-critical section. Pink curing salt (Prague Powder) is not Himalayan pink salt. They look similar; they are not remotely interchangeable. That confusion has caused serious harm. Every page in this library states it plainly, and the curing-salts page explains the chemistry in detail.

The four topics

Supporting material