Headlines & features
What nanny doesn't want you to know
12/16/2009 4:09 pm
Government was wrong 30 years ago in banning saccharine; they approved it 20 years later. Angela Logomasini, writing for OpenMarket.org says the same may be the case for salt:
Seasoned with safety: Road salt supplier wins recognition
12/13/2009 8:00 pm
Detroit Salt's receipt of MSHA's Sentinels of Safety Award is featured in the December 13 edition of Crain's Detroit Business . Good story.
New York's big plate specials
12/12/2009
Big Apple-based Ray Sokolov, food editor of the Wall Street Journal , apparently didn't get the mayor's memo that His Honor wants to change New Yorkers' culinary lifestyle. Sokolov with its emphasis on small portions and a politically-correct mix of nutrients. Sokolov set out looking for hearty fare, reporting that "lately I have been craving an alternative to the mingy and the fleeting. I want big plates, single ginormous dishes designed to feed a crowd. And here in New York County, alias Manhattan, where satisfaction is only a non-maxed-out credit card away, I found them." First up: bo ssäm, an entire 8- to 10-pound pork butt coated in sugar and salt, roasted in a slow oven for six hours and then seared briefly in a very hot oven until it acquires a crisp caramel coating and the meat within has turned to shreds."
...
City of Seattle's new snowfighting strategy: salt
12/11/2009 7:04 am
Seattle learned their lesson after using sand last year and incurring the wrath of residents.
Wisconsin DOT learns snowfighting lessons
12/10/2009
All-time record snows fell this week in southern Wisconsin, but the Wisconsin DOT was prepared, learning lessons from a "nightmare" failure to respond to a major storm February 6, 2008, reports Ben Jones on postcrescent.com .
Surprising secrets of sea salt
12/04/2009
Sea salt conjures up all manner of positive thoughts, this story on KOCO-TV recounts. The Salt Institute applies an overlay of factual information to help consumers make sense of the hype -- and learn to enjoy the benefits of salt.
Price of salt, supply improve
11/30/2009
Weather forecasters predict a mild, dry winter and local roads agencies have been working hard to lock up salt supplies for the coming winter, reports the Northwest Indiana Post-Tribune . As a result, agencies are finding salt companies offering lower prices and adequate supplies to meet requested bids.
Culture clash in medicine
11/20/2009
Kevin Sack's news analysis on this week's turmoil as the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force revised its evidentiary review on the frequency of recommended mammograms surfaced cultural values colliding as "the science of medicine bumped up against the foundations of American medical consumerism: that more is better, that saving a life is worth any sacrifice, that health care is a birthright."
New UNICEF report touts iodized salt
11/11/2009
The U.N. Children's Fund says 8.8 million children under age five die from largely preventable causes every year. A new report finds a few simple, cost-effective interventions, including use of iodized salt, could save the lives of many children currently dying from malnutrition related illnesses.
Street maintenance ready for winter weather
11/05/2009
Oklahoma City snowfighting crews have been training on snowplows and salt spreaders. They're "almost looking forward to the first freeze" reports Brian Brus in The Journal Record .
