When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of salt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_salt

    In Ethiopia blocks of salt, called amoleh, were carved from the salt pans of the Afar Depression, especially around Lake Afrera, then carried by camel west to Atsbi and Ficho in the highland, whence traders distributed them throughout the rest of Ethiopia, as far south as the Kingdom of Kaffa. [34] These salt blocks served as a form of currency ...

  3. Salt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt

    What is now thought to have been the first city in Europe is Solnitsata, in Bulgaria, which was a salt mine, providing the area now known as the Balkans with salt since 5400 BC. [10] Salt was the best-known food preservative, especially for meat, for many thousands of years. [ 11 ]

  4. Salt and pepper shakers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_and_pepper_shakers

    Salt and pepper shakers, along with a sugar dispenser Georgian silver pepper shaker, or pepperette, hallmarked London 1803. Salt and pepper shakers or salt and pepper pots, of which the first item can also be called a salt cellar in British English, [1] are condiment dispensers used in European cuisine that are designed to allow diners to distribute grains of edible salt and ground peppercorns.

  5. Saltpetre works - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saltpetre_works

    Besides "Montepellusanus", [4] during the thirteenth century (and beyond) the only supply of saltpeter across Christian Europe (according to "De Alchimia" in 3 manuscripts of Michael Scot, 1180–1236) was "found in Spain in Aragonia in a certain mountain near the sea", (which can only be Catalonia): saraceni apellant ipsum borax et credunt quod sit alumen.

  6. Salt cellar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_cellar

    A salt cellar (also called a salt, salt-box) is an article of tableware for holding and dispensing salt. In British English, the term can be used for what in North American English are called salt shakers. [1] [2] Salt cellars can be either lidded or open, and are found in a wide range of sizes, from large shared vessels to small individual ...

  7. Sea salt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_salt

    It is also called bay salt, [1] ... salt are made from coconut ... Europe and China. [19] Sea salt has also been shown to be contaminated by fungi that can cause food ...

  8. Upgrade to a faster, more secure version of a supported browser. It's free and it only takes a few moments:

  9. Salt mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_mining

    Diorama of an underground salt mine in Germany. Inside Salina Veche, in Slănic, Prahova, Romania.The railing (lower middle) gives the viewer an idea of scale. Before the advent of the modern internal combustion engine and earth-moving equipment, mining salt was one of the most expensive and dangerous of operations because of rapid dehydration caused by constant contact with the salt (both in ...