MSG
Author
Discussion

Prisoner 24601

Original Poster:

626 posts

68 months

Thursday 20th November
quotequote all
Monosodium Glutamate....

1) Never owned a pack and never used it in cooking.
2) Own a pack and use it regularly in Asian cooking.
3) Own a pack and use it regularly in Asian cooking and also occassionally in British dishes such as stew, cottage pie etc.

Super Sonic

11,244 posts

74 months

Thursday 20th November
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1

Nothingtoseehere

4,744 posts

207 months

Thursday 20th November
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Prisoner 24601 said:
Monosodium Glutamate....

1) Never owned a pack and never used it in cooking.
2) Own a pack and use it regularly in Asian cooking.
3) Own a pack and use it regularly in Asian cooking and also occassionally in British dishes such as stew, cottage pie etc.
3. Use it occasionally across the board - I don't do much Asian cooking.

It's another seasoning, no need to be shy of it.

nikaiyo2

5,606 posts

215 months

Thursday 20th November
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Number 3 here. Have to agree with Uncle Roger

https://www.facebook.com/nigelngcomedy/videos/what...

21TonyK

12,686 posts

229 months

Thursday 20th November
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3.

Don't use on a daily basis but when salt is not desired MSG can enhance things like a dessert or sauce. Or used to partially substitute salt in dishes using ingredients naturally high in salt or where delicate flavours would be overpowered.

ambuletz

11,473 posts

201 months

Thursday 20th November
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3.
its best in asian cooking, but works in others. other foods naturally contain MSG. Parmesan is high in MSG and italians put it on everything, essentially cheesy MSG.

When it comes to adding it to stir fry you really have to make sure it comes with contact with walls of the screaming hot wok and don't just sprinkle it ontop.

RobbieTheTruth

2,425 posts

139 months

Thursday 20th November
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3

toasty

8,133 posts

240 months

Thursday 20th November
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3. If I’m adding a dash of salt, I’ll often add a sprinkle of msg

Jer_1974

1,621 posts

213 months

Thursday 20th November
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3.

ambuletz

11,473 posts

201 months

Friday 21st November
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I rarely eat pot noodle, but in the past few years I've found myself adding msg to it because of just how bland it tastes as they so hard to make it seem 'healthy'

BIRMA

4,124 posts

214 months

Friday 21st November
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There was a big fuss in the 80's about MSG because it was labelled as giving you the 'I want more syndrome' and Chinese takeaways were highlighted as using too much of it. I thought Sodium Glutamate was preferred

unzippy

76 posts

258 months

Friday 21st November
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BIRMA said:
There was a big fuss in the 80's about MSG because it was labelled as giving you the 'I want more syndrome' and Chinese takeaways were highlighted as using too much of it. I thought Sodium Glutamate was preferred
All now comprehensively debunked as racism.

dapprman

2,667 posts

287 months

Friday 21st November
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I'm another occasional 3

FiF

47,476 posts

271 months

Friday 21st November
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1.

But after watching Ziang's YT channel thinking of moving to a careful 2.

The Gauge

5,786 posts

33 months

Friday 21st November
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I only use it in Chinese takeaway cooking, never think to use it in anything else, but as its simply a flavour enhancer like salt, then maybe I should.

On the subject of flavour enhancing, I once heard that chefs might use as much salt as possible in a dish bot without being able to taste it, as that obviously spoils the dish.





Edited by The Gauge on Friday 21st November 14:59

21TonyK

12,686 posts

229 months

Friday 21st November
quotequote all
The Gauge said:
On the subject of flavour enhancing, I once heard that chefs might use as much salt as possible in a dish bot without being able to taste it, as that obviously spoils the dish.
Within reason. Problem is for a lot of chefs, you can become too accustomed to heavily seasoned food and you need to moderate.

One thing to remember is when you are seasoning water for cooking its the volume of water you are seasoning, not the amount of food you put in it.

I did a "how to season" thread years ago, basically start with plain mashed potato and season until you taste the salt then you have gone too far.

Also, white pepper is a forgotton flavour enhancer as are mustards and capsicum of any type.