Sodium Citrate Powder 8 Ounce - Food Grade, Non-GMO - Emulsifier for Cheese, Spherification, and Molecular Gastronomy Cooking
C**A
Does the job
Makes a mean, velvety cheese sauce
M**N
High Quality At A Good Price Point
Works as intended. I mainly use to stabilize cheese for queso.
B**Y
Forget classical the French method of using a roux.
Roux are for people who like their cheese sauce to be gritty. Instead just use cheddar (or really any flavorful cheese that's able to melt), milk, and 7% of this by weight. So if you're doing 100 grams of cheddar and milk put together, use 7 grams of this stuff. You can even heat it up in a microwave. With the sodium citrate it'll mix together real well and be the smoothest, creamiest cheese sauce you've ever had. No more flour grittiness from a roux.The name might sound scary "sodium citrate" sounds chemically, OooooOOOOOoooo. Nah, it's just the results of mixing citric acid and baking soda together. You can do it yourself. Mix 2.1 grams of citric acid, with 2.5 grams of baking soda, and then it'll go through a chemical process of creating a salt, which is what happens any time you mix an acid with a base. After it settles down you'll have 2.9 grams of sodium citrate suspended in 1.7 grams of water. Just evaporate off the water and you've got your sodium citrate.And if the thought of doing chemistry of any sort for food scares you, then stop cooking, because all cooking is chemistry; baking doubly so. Table salt, which is absolutely vital to both cooking and to human physiology (your tears and saliva are an aqueous solution of NaCL aka table salt, and your brain won't even work without at least some NaCL as its the primary electrolyte that allows the electrical currents in your brain to work in the first place) is the result of an ancient reaction of hydrochloric aid and sodium hydroxide. Likewise, sodium citrate is an emulsifying salt made with citric acid (lemon juice, silly), and sodium bicarbonate (baking soda).In otherwords, don't worry that it has a scary sounding chemical name, it's perfectly safe and is great for making cheeses mix with milk to make them sooooo meltable.
C**I
I bought this but haven’t used it yet… lost my recipe.
I love my recipe I bought this for, but I want to try it out, it’s suppose to make gravy’s and cheese sauces so smooth and creamy
C**R
May deserve 5 stars?
I haven’t use this a great deal but I don’t find it to be all that helpful. It may be for people who have a better understanding of how to use it. That’s why I said it might be five stars. At any rate it didn’t harm anything.
A**R
Worked great
Made queso. Yummy
A**P
Smooth
Used this to make velvety cheese sauces. Add a little of this to make the perfect queso dip or Mac and cheese.
T**Y
If you make sauce with cheese, it is this you need!
I've been making world famous cheese sauces for decades. Alfredo, cheddar, and the like. The flavor is always spot on but I hate when they break or separate when reheated. The addition on just 1 heaping teaspoon to your sauce (while mixing) will prevent all that. Your sauce will be as smooth as ever, not break, and not separate if over or reheated. Wonderful stuff! And it adds no undesirable flavor either.
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