Kitchen Hacks

How to Save an Overly Salty or Spicy Dish

September 10, 2019
Photo by Rocky Luten

Inspired by conversations on the Food52 Hotline, we're sharing tips and tricks that make navigating all of our kitchens easier and more fun. Today: How can you fix an overseasoned dish? Don't panic! Just follow these tips.

How to Save an Overly Spicy Dish on Food52

We've all been there. You're expecting guests at any moment, you've just popped open a bottle of wine, and you turn your all-day soup down to a simmer. You dip in your finger for a quick taste test, and oh no.

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You've gone way overboard on the salt and your tongue tastes like you just jumped, open-mouthed, into an oncoming wave. Or maybe your eyes tear up, heat rises to your cheeks, and you start fanning yourself before finally sticking your mouth under the kitchen faucet.

After the shock comes confusion, regret, and then, finally, panic. The doorbell rings as your first guest arrives. Who gets to a party on time, anyway?!

Freeze. 

Overseasoning is a bummer—and it happens to all of us. In fact, it's an issue that's been floating around our Hotline for years, in one form or another. But if you follow these emergency guidelines, you can resuscitate a meal on the edge of death, and turn a near-tragedy into a victory. 

All great meals are about balance. The five tastes—sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and umami—should all complement each other, without any specific one hogging the limelight. When one of those tastes becomes too strong, the dish will taste off. Obviously, depending on the desired finished product, certain tastes will be more dominant, but they must be kept in check.

How to Save an Overly Salty/Spicy Dish on Food52 How to Save an Overly Salty/Spicy Dish on Food52

General Cures

When faced with an over-seasoned dish, your first move should be to try to balance out the flavors.  Often, this is done by playing with fat, sweetness, and acids. Depending on the issue at hand, try adding a drizzle of olive oil, squeeze of lemon, or spoonful of sugar to your dish, then taste test again and proceed from there. You can also customize these flavors—say, sub in butter for olive oil, vinegar for citrus, or honey (or maple syrup) in for sugar. 

Second resort: dilution. If you're making a soup or a stew, add water, unsalted broth, any non-dairy milk (from coconut to oat), or cream to dilute the excess seasoning. Increasing the volume of the dish will spread out the spice or salt, and make each individual serving more palatable. 

If it wouldn't make sense to add more liquid to your dish—say, if it's a salad or a pilaf—try adding more bulk to put things on an even keel. Unseasoned rice, potatoes, beans, or any other other neutral, starchy ingredient will help round out the flavor.

More: Need some grain-spiration? We can help you out.

If none of these methods help ease your palate, there are a few more specific cures to target your overseasoning dilemmas. Keep that chin up! 

If Your Dish Is Too Spicy...

How to Save an Overly Salty/Spicy Dish on Food52   How to Save an Overly Salty/Spicy Dish on Food52

When it comes to spice, dairy is the best neutralizer. This is because chiles contain capsaicin, a substance which makes your tastebuds feel that fiery burn. Meanwhile, milk contains casein, a compound which bonds with capsaicin and helps dissipate it. (Science!) Next time you want to dial back the spice level on a dish, try stirring in a few spoonfuls of yogurt, sour cream, or crème fraîche—and next time you're dared to eat a whole jalapeño pepper, be sure to have a glass of milk handy.

More: A hefty dollop of sour cream cools the burn of this hearty chili.

Another ingredient that can help combat spice is nut or seed butter. Rich in fat, nut butters will mellow out the fire in your dishes—just make sure its flavors will play well with the other ingredients. Similarly, creamy avocado can help soothe a burning tongue. 

Sweetness can also balance a too-spicy dish. When our recipe developer Emma Laperruque made a chili that was way too spicy, she found a solution in dried fruit: "Adding water or broth wasn't enough. Dolloping yogurt on top wouldn't be enough," she wrote. But simmering prunes, then puréeing them into a paste, added just enough sweetness to counteract the punch. In a similar situation, you could turn to sugar, brown sugar, maple syrup, honey, or molasses. 

If Your Dish Is Too Salty...

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Have you heard of the potato myth? It's the rumor that dropping a raw potato into an over-salted soup will "draw out" some of the salt. Sorry to break it to you, but this myth is 100% that—a myth. Busted.

While raw potatoes do indeed draw out some of the salt from a liquid, they also absorb a proportionate amount of liquid. Sorry, spud. If you dish is too salty, there are more reliable ways to balance things out. Let's take it case by case: 

1. Too salty soup. Add more liquid (just make sure it's unseasoned—aka, not an already seasoned broth). Or add more mix-ins, such as vegetable chunks or cooked rice. Or add both! You can also stir in a small amount of sweetener to taste. 

2. Too salty pot roast. Take a cue from Samin Nosrat. "Shred an oversalted piece of meat to turn it into a new dish where it's just one ingredient of many," she writes in Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat. For example: "a stew, chili, a soup, hash, ravioli filling." Psst: This also applies to oversalted vegetables and grains.  

3. Too salty salad. Add more neutral-flavored components, like lettuce. Additionally, you can mix up a quick "dressing" by combining olive oil and honey or maple syrup, and incorporate this to taste. 

Now, all caution aside, don't be shy with your seasoning. Professional chefs say that most home cooks err on the side of caution and underseason their food. So, while they are possible to overdo, salt and spices are your friends.

The solution, which you should adopt from here on out, is to season as you go, and taste frequently—very frequently. Consider it an excellent excuse to sneak samples of whatever you're cooking up.

 This article was originally published in 2014. We updated it with even more tips. How do you correct a dish that's too salty or spicy? Tell us in the comments!

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78 Comments

kimikoftokyo October 20, 2019
I’ve always added water or if it’s too spicy paired it with rice and put yogurt in it. No one told me this idk how common sense popped in lol. Now with salty things ,water became the obvious to dilute it and my mother said you can always put things like beans or rice into it and not to season until close to the end or after. I’m like makes sense. I always make spicy things then realize people are dying lol but they like it ,so quickly I turn my curry on high and add yogurt. It’s not only creamer but it goes faster lol. I also add mild and spicy curries together to balance the taste and the spice.
 
James D. October 14, 2019
Another tip I learnt is that if your tomato soup is too spicy or anything of the like, you can take half of the spicy soup out and add more tomato soup(not spicy) in.
 
trij218 September 12, 2019
I enjoy hearing about other people's mistakes because I have definitely made more than enough especially in the kitchen and with SALT! Even though I try to limit my salt intake to help with my blood pressure and weight loss journey, some dishes are not the same without the right amount of salt :) So thank you for the tips to doctor our accidentally, too salty dishes. If you were curious on any other healthy dishes you should check out this site I've been subscribed to who sends me recipes on a regular. They help me out a lot with good meals, my weight loss, and not over salting my meals. Have a look for yourself, http://bit.ly/2kf2SNL and thanks again for the pleasant read.
 
Dory September 25, 2018
Help! I made two large pans of eggplant lasagna (with spinach and mushrooms too...no noodles, no meat). I salted each of the, oh, 100 or so paper-thin slices of eggplant and let them sit, then drained the water off, patted them dry individually with paper towels, and grilled them a bit before assembling my pans of lasagna and pre-baking them, to be reheated later before serving to guests. We took a tiny sliver off the end to taste. WAY TOO SALTY!!!! What now?!?! Help!
 
Dr.Insomnia September 25, 2018
There's no fix for this that I can imagine. I recommend taking individual slices and cooking in another dish, like a frittata (with minimal added salt). Use the eggplant lasagna as a filling inside of an undersalted pastry crust, or anywhere else where it's a filling or topping that can be diluted by the surrounding package.

In the future, keep in mind that the amount of salt you need is relative to the volume of the food. If you make very thin slices, especially of a vegetable that's 90% water that is going to cook off, you're going to be left with a very salty remnant. It's about surface-area to volume ratio.

A safe way to control yourself is to set up a mise en place ahead of time with the amount of salt that would be reasonable for cooking a whole eggplant, say if it was thick-sliced.
 
Dory September 25, 2018
Thank you for your timely reply! I think I'm going to take your advice and make several frittatas with the lasagna. You are also to be thanked for the epiphany I had while reading your response. I suddenly realized that, while I'm extremely organized at work, I must confess that I'm ridiculously random in the kitchen, leading to frequent disasters. Setting up a mise en place never occurs to me. Seriously. So, I'm going to make myself a little kitchen sign to remind me, and convert to this new religion. Now, can you help me with my six months of horrendous insomnia?
 
Dr.Insomnia September 25, 2018
Making mise is something I picked up from restaurant work. I don't always stick faithfully to it. But I can guarantee that if I make a mistake (like the time I used baking powder instead of cornstarch in a stir fry), or forget an ingredient, it's because I was rushing and grabbing things out of the cabinet in the middle of cooking. It ends up costing more time to work that way, causes more mistakes, and can also be very dangerous. I made a stir fry this week and nearly sliced my finger because I was rushing to cut mushrooms while cooking other parts of the stir fry. If you do your cutting all at once, you get in a safe rhythm of cutting. If you do all of your frying at once, you get in a safe rhythm of frying. If you make your mise ahead of time, you see all of the ingredients laid out in front of you, have time to catch mistakes, and also have more ability to be creative because you've seen the full palate.

As for your insomnia, the best suggestion I can make is to not work yourself up about it (I'm a Ph.D. who happens to suffer from insomnia, not an insomnia doctor). If you can't sleep, be productive with that time, instead of dwelling on the inability to sleep. Pick up that book you've been putting off reading (the boring one that puts you to sleep). Some people say meditate, but I'm terrible at meditation. I do find deep breathing exercises and trying to have productive thoughts helps me out. And exercising regularly is a big key for me. Physical exhaustion helps a lot when you aren't mentally exhausted enough to shut off.
 
Dory September 26, 2018
This was such a thorough and thoughtful (those aren't necessarily redundant, are they?) reply that I was taken aback. Also incredibly grateful. I was glad that you continued the argument for mise en place even though I had already converted. It doesn't come naturally to me and really needed the reminder about nearly hacking off body parts when things are chaotic. And I think being disorganized around cooking has been a subconscious ploy to remain true to myself as a creative person (yes, you're following a recipe but look, you're juggling the knives and throwing salt around); a ploy that is old and inefficient. And thank you for the sleeping advice that didn't include any potions (they all give me hallucinations). I'm constantly getting up and reading or doing things that I need to do, but I would love to wake up after an 8 or even 7 hour stretch of sleep. Today I will take your advice and try to wear myself out physically. I'm quite fit, but perhaps a bit easy on myself in the exercise department. Thanks again.
 
Patricia T. August 12, 2018
HELP, please. I just made a huge pot of Slumgullion that is extremely hot. I tried lemon juice, ketchup, vinegar, sugar and just added raw potatoes that supposedly will absorb the heat. Company will be here in two hours, is there anything els I can do? Amazingly the taste is still very good except for the heat. Thank you for your help!
 
Dr.Insomnia August 12, 2018
If you've tried acids and sugars, the only other thing to do is dilute it with more water. At that point you can add more acids, sugars, and salt to help balance the heat.
 
Martin R. August 6, 2018
Curiosity didn't leave me alone.... Had no fish around, so I tried with scallops (coquille saint Jacques) so I tried with the creamy soy sauce. It has sugar in it and is capable for neutralizing many things. Seafood tastes more exotic, but.... :The color changes to light brown. Let me know!
 
LeaSha August 6, 2018
I tried some sugar and it did help a little, but the sour flavor was too overpowering to really fix it. Thanks for your help!
 
Martin R. August 5, 2018
No experience with this kind of situation....sorry & good luck.
 
Martin R. August 5, 2018
No experience with that, sorry....& good luck!
 
LeaSha August 5, 2018
Ok. Thanks anyway.
 
LeaSha August 5, 2018
Any tips for balancing out the flavor of an Asian fish stew that is much too sour?
 
Dr.Insomnia August 5, 2018
I think the only way to counteract sour is to add sweetness. So you'll end up with a sweet & sour stew.
 
Cathi April 24, 2018
I made a Scallop Casserole that called for seafood broth, The seafood taste is so strong & salty it's impossible to eat. It was a very large & expensive dish. Is there anyway to correct this with out having to throw it out? Pl;ease help.
 
zora April 24, 2018
What else is in it? Can you drain off any of the broth? It's hard to know what to suggest without having more information. Tomato? Rice? Cream?
 
Sandy F. January 28, 2018
I use a spoonful or so of cocoa if something is too spicy.
 
Rita January 4, 2018
How about too much Italian seasoning in my soup.
 
Mary April 14, 2017
I bought beef tounge but it's to salty and tried to clean not going off the salt need advice please?
 
Dr.Insomnia February 27, 2017
This is generally good but the best advice is toward the end, which is to taste as you go. The big thing I find you have to be careful for is being aware of the amount of salt around in the ingredients you add, like condiments, or canned stock and vegetables. This becomes more of a problem if you're reducing the liquid a lot. It may not seem salty at first, but it may become saltier as you reduce the liquid, so be careful with that last dash of salt before serving.

And don't blindly follow the salt guidelines on a recipe unless you're sure that the ingredients you're using are identical to what is called for in the recipe.
 
maggie T. February 14, 2017
I made a pork loin roast and over peppered it-I don't do hot spice anything ever so after reading many of these comments I tried the sugar and lemon-I used about 5 table spoons of sugar and just eyeballed the lemon juice-it did the trick-I would off hated to throw out an entire pork roast
 
Leigh October 30, 2016
I made a gumbo that I overspiced. And didn't thicken enough. Added a potato, 2 carrots and a tbs of sugar. Worked like a charm. Its not a myth. It does work in certain circumstances.
 
Bo October 4, 2016
Hi everyone
Salty dish, no problem
Just add 1 packet of stevia and 2-3 tbs of any kind of plain yogurt
Problem solved
I made beef stew that was really salty, after adding stevia and plain yogurt, the stew was delicious
I hope my idea will help everyone with salty food
 
Kimberly P. September 13, 2016
I just made crab soup and added too much old Bay it's a vegetable crab soup but way to spicy help
 
Steve B. June 7, 2016
The 'potato myth', i.e. add a potato to draw out the salt, I don't know where you got your info from.....it's not a myth, it works. I leave my potatoes as big as possible depending on how much liquid I have in the pan....
 
Samantha April 11, 2016
Awesome just made a homemade seasoning for my baked chicken and added to much salt! I used lemon juice from fresh lemon and a little sweet n low and it is way better!! Awesome advice on sweeting it up!
 
rdswysd4 June 14, 2016
I'd rather have the salt than sweetNlow. Please do research on Excitotoxins.
 
kathleen K. November 28, 2016
Use stevia, a natural sweetener rather than sweet n low - same concept and better for you. Too much salt is too much.
 
Dale C. March 16, 2016
I made beef and broccoli and it came out salty. I didn't add any salt so it must have been some of the ingredients. So I added the juice of one lemon a little at a time and a spoonful of sugar and it absolutely worked it mellowed the salty taste and added just a hint of sweetness to the dish! Thanks for the tip.
 
Janette March 15, 2016
Help! I added too much Italian Seasoning
 
Martin R. March 16, 2016
Hello Janette, add German seasoning! These two nations together create a good emotional average! ;)
 
Bob C. February 21, 2016
I can't speak to over salting but I just made a stew that I put away too much pepper in. IT WAS LIKE MAGIC had occurred after I put a Tablespoon of Lemon Juice and a likewise amount of sugar. THE PEPPER mellowed right out and the stew is delicious!!! I am so surprised and pleased :-)
 
Martin R. February 22, 2016
Hello Bob
Thank you for this interesting idea, I have to run this on a experimental base as soon as possible. could help in many cases, since the invention of the motor driven pepper grinder I tend to overuse it. Regards,
Martin from Switzerland
 
Trish P. December 2, 2015
Hello Ms. Lamb and staff. I made a seafood salad yesterday that has Hellman's mayo and elbow macaroni in the dish. It was a very large dish so my daughter separated into two portions. One mild for her and one spicy for me. She put Tony Chachere's Famous Creole Cuisine seasoning, Morton's Season All and cayenne pepper and red pepper flakes in mine. We came back from the store and was delighted because it looked very good. We both tasted it and realized it's too salty. How can I save this expensive dish?
 
Tsvia Z. October 17, 2015
stuffed grape leaves came out too salty! can they be saved?
 
Eleanor September 17, 2015
Any tips for over seasoning my black beans and rice with Garam Masala. Far too clovey!Help!
 
Mz. H. September 16, 2015
I made some beans to go over rice for dinner and tasted my beans in which they were too salty, i added maybe 6 drops of lemon juice, a little bit of sugar as I didn't want to have a sweet taste to the beans, but what i found that worked was to add more water and a little bit of flour to thicken the beans juice and now they are perfect and you don't taste the flour in the mixture at all.
 
Sam S. August 9, 2015
Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU! This saved my crab stuffed mushroom filling that was too salty. I took your advice and added in some sour cream, lemon zest and lemon juice. It tasted awesome! I appreciate you!
 
Bill F. July 28, 2015
I make a beef stew from scratch. It takes at least five hours prep and cooking time. By mistake I bought a beef stock that wasn't low sodium and didn't notice until it was too late. The recipe requires three cups of the stock. Needless to say the stew was much too salty. I now have a huge stew that is too salty. I am going to freeze most of it and use it as a base for a vegetable beef soup this coming winter. I will add more water and a bag of frozen mixed vegetables (thawed and rinsed well). Hoping this will dilute the saltiness and will save a very time/labor intensive as well as a expensive dish.
 
Pam H. May 18, 2015
Thank you, thank you, thank you. Saved my meal!! I LOVE THIS SITE!
 
Suzanne March 31, 2015
I make pierogies with onion cheese mixture. How do I fix a strong onion flavor once they are cooked and added to the potatoes? Help please
 
Martin R. April 2, 2015
Hi Suzanne
Pierogi, Piroschki, Pirogge or Piroghi originate from the area of Poland and the western parts of its ex Russian neighbors. It belongs to the group of meat filled pastries.
In this part of Europe the onion is the most important part of many food preparations. It is not just a vegetable, it is the major conditioning of a meal. I was told by a local from Leningrad that the regular consumption of onion used to compensate – now they have greenhouses and imports – the lack of many other vegetables due to climatic conditions.
In a Russian recipe for Piroschki they take 1 lbs. of onions for 1 ½ lbs. of meat. For the famous beef filet Stroganoff (or Stroganow), named after the old – 17th century - and very rich Stroganow family from Leningrad (St. Petersburg) it is 1.3 lbs. sliced onion to 2.2 lbs. of meat.
The strong onion flavor – sulfur reaction – can be reduced by slicing the onions, add about 10% of salt, let it stand for 30 to 60 minutes and the rinse it with cold water. But that way you’re wasting the healthy part of the vegetable. It also helps – without loss – to some thin sliced white mushrooms. It works as a neutralizer.
Enjoy your meal.
Martin from Switzerland
 
maryanne March 30, 2015
My Mom always used a pinch of baking soda in her tomato sauce. It is freaky the way it bubbles up. I have tried that for the acid and also sugar, but I still cannot get the flavor I am looking for. I have read that you should not use tomatoes from a can, but I have only found one kind in a box, and the other brands always seem to look and sound better. Wish I had a good Italian friend who sauce I love. Then I would watch her/him make it and never forget how!
 
Eileen S. March 30, 2015
I just ruined (almost) a beautiful creme of mushroom soup that took me a couple of hours to make.... thought hard on the problem and recalled a bit of high school science. Added 1/4 cup of my red wine. Voila' !! We have delicious soup tonite!
 
Karen R. March 18, 2015
i just used the baking soda trick for too much vinegar in my chili. For a dish hat's too salty, depending on what it is I do the following:
If I use a potao, I peel it and cut it inot quarters lengthwise and place in my pot. it has always worked for me. take it out before it disintegrates... lemon juice and vinegars, add a bit at a time. and same with sugar, a bit at a time...and taste.
 
Maggie February 16, 2015
Thank you for this. We are having exceptionally cold weather and somehow a crockpot of chicken tortilla soup sounded good. I used a prepackaged mix ( hanging head in shame) but I should have known better. It smelled so good I snuck a small bowl to taste but it is so salty it tastes virtually inedible. Forget what the TV chefs say -- season your food to YOUR taste. The addition of sour cream helped a lot, and I normally DO add lime juice to zing it up. That is what I forgot tonight, but will remember tomorrow! Loved the logical and rational discussion of sugars and acids. Very nice and answered my need.
 
joyce December 3, 2014
I think I added too much paprica and pepper to onion soup
 
Angel September 8, 2014
I tried a slow cooker recipe for chicken. I should have known the dish would come out salty because of the two main ingredients - condensed cheddar cheese soup and zesty Italian dressing. Although it didn't hit me while I combined my ingredients for 6 hours, it certainly did when I got home for the ultimate taste test! Canned and (some) prepared foods (even low sodium) are very salty and tend to leave my jaws aching! Now I have this delicious looking meal, but it is too salty to eat...if I dilute it, the sauce won't be sauce. It will be soup. I did try a little sugar, and now it tastes funny. I guess I just can't wrap my head around slightly sweet chicken, cheddar cheese, and zesty Italian dressing. Any other suggestions?
 
Martin R. April 16, 2014
Hello - to whom it may concern. (Sorry – bad English, writing from Switzerland)
All the rest of your hints and ideas - perfect and useful.
But! Why, how and from where do get the myth buster about the potatoes? I am no potato farmer or processor and I am not related with anyone from this industry. I am just – as my wife keeps telling me – a crazy freak about cooking.
You say potatoes absorb water! How should that be possible? The specific weight of potato is slightly higher than water (1.05 to 1.1) if they are fresh!
If they are boiled, they exchange some water with stark and they suck up salt. If not – how do you explain, that they taste good (salty) after cooking. If water is missing in the casserole, then it is because of evaporation. (Heat – steam . .)
Boil them in a pressure cooker and you’ll see! By the way – if boiled in a pressure cooker, you’ll find a layer of jelly like product on the bottom – that’s the stark. Do not throw it away, it is wonderful to make gravy less liquid.
 
susan G. April 7, 2014
To taste as you go, do what I learned from the original Julia Child TV series: have tasting spoon in one hand, cooking spoon in the other; cooking spoon takes a dip from the pot, puts the 'taste' in your tasting spoon; taste and put your spoon aside for subsequent tastes; put the cooking spoon aside and continue cooking. Simple and clean.
 
Jack M. April 7, 2014
You didn't answer the over salting problem!!!
 
I_Fortuna April 7, 2014
This is what Ms. Lamb says about salt "While raw potatoes do indeed draw out some of the salt from a liquid, they also absorb a proportionate amount of liquid. Sorry, spud. If you dish is too salty, and dilution isn't helping, sweetness is usually the best way to balance it out."
You can halve the recipe, freeze it, and use half for a base the next time you make the dish.
 
Amanda W. July 10, 2014
Over-seasoning specifically refers to over-salting 9/10, and the solutions given to over seasoning in the article are in fact solutions to over-salting
 
fran S. April 6, 2014
What about over salting chicken soup?
 
Rosemary April 6, 2014
A few weeks ago my husband made his famous chili bean recipe but I asked him to try a new tomato puree that I had purchased rather than his usual brand name tomato sauce. I was busy in another part of the house and when he called me down for dinner he explained that the puree had no flavor and encouraged me to taste it. I did and verified his findings. However when I tasted his chili beans he has obviously put too much lemon juice in as I could barely eat them. I think he was trying to bring out the taste of the tomato. He admonished me saying, it wasn't that acidy at all. I usually store them in canning jars in the refrigerator, but the next time we had them the acidy taste had disappeared. I was prepared to mix a little baking soda and water and encorporate it into the pan when I was (re) heating the chili beans, but I thought I would taste them first. To my surprise, the acidy taste had disappeared!
As a Home Economics major years ago in college she always recommended measuring the salt for a recipe over a clean empty container to avoid over pouring. When the "too much salt" question came up, the instructor suggested dividing the recipe in half and adding another set of the remaining ingredients to each thereby doubling the recipe but in two separate containers. Other than throwing out the ingredients or having something inedible, this seemed plausible.
 
Helen April 6, 2014
I don't think you answered the question, 'how do save an oversalted dish?'
 
Amy M. April 6, 2014
I didn't learn anything about oversalted dishes. The title is misleading.
 
kathleen K. November 28, 2016
Try adding a quartered potato if this is a dish with liquid. Won't hurt anything and you can discard the potato. Several said they added lemon and a little sweet n low (not good for you; I would use stevia) and the salt was neutralized.
 
Rebecca B. April 6, 2014
If you really need to cool off your blistered tonque using cucumbers chopped or sliced will always work. experienced this first in Malaysia over chicken satay w/peanut sauce. The sauce was extremely hot and cukes were served with! Instantly took away the burn*!*
 
Sam S. August 9, 2015
Rebecca - I've used brown sugar, a 1/2 tsp at a time until I think it tastes right. That's helped every time.
 
maryanne April 6, 2014
I always use dairy to cool down the fire, plus, I never salt until the recipe is completed, then I taste it and add salt if necessary. My biggest problem is with tomato sauce, I cannot seem to get rid of the acid when I am using canned tomatoes. I buy the best available but my sauce never taste right to me. I keep thinking it is the cans, but what are you suppose to do when your garden isn't growing and tomato's are not in season locally? I hate not having good pasta sauce six months out of the year!
 
I_Fortuna April 6, 2014
A bit of sugar cuts acidity and also lessens the heat of a dish too spicy hot.
 
Bobbie O. April 6, 2014
I sometimes put a fresh, sweet, good carrot in the sauce as it cooks and take it out before serving. An old, bland, tasteless carrot won't do. But sugar is the most reliable addition to neutralize acidity in tomatoes that I have found.
 
zora April 6, 2014
To correct for bitterness, honey is my go-to. If that makes the dish too sweet, some lemon balances it out.
 
I_Fortuna April 6, 2014
The longer something is cooked the saltier it gets. There is natural salt in some foods so I only put a small amount of salt in my cooking if any. Canned and frozen foods have a good amount of salt in them so adjust accordingly. Taste, Taste, Taste your cooking. I can't believe how many people complain about their own cooking and never taste it during the process. As for roasts, I am not sure how these can be messed up. The outside is the only part seasoned in my kitchen. I am not sure how everyone else does theirs. The more one lays off the table salt the more one will taste the salt already there. Let your guests season their own plate, that is why we have salt and pepper shakers.
 
cookinalong April 6, 2014
The only way something gets saltier as it cooks is if there is salt in there to begin with and evaporation concentrates it. E.g. soup or sauce that's been salted. Otherwise, there's no magic that produces sodium as something cooks. Plain frozen vegetables generally don't have added salt, it's usually the ones with prepared sauces or seasoning mixes included. As for canned stuff, it's on the label and most things like corn or tomatoes are available in salt free. Agree totally that you have to taste as you go. Avoids unpleasant surprises in the end! I think some people are germophobic & worry about contaminating the food. I say, if you've got a cold or bubonic plague, use a clean spoon each time you taste and stop worrying! However, I disagree about the salt issue. I think most people under-salt. Especially pasta, usually because they don't add enough salt to the cooking water. Then, no matter what sauce you serve with it, it's going to taste flat. Foods in their natural state usually contain only trace amts. of sodium, the only time you need to worry about salt overload is when cooking with prepared ingredients or sauces. Salting (and seasoning) as well as tasting as you go is the way to end up with a dish you're happy with. That way, you can stop when it's salty or spicy enough for you and you don't have to make "repairs".
 
I_Fortuna April 6, 2014
Yes, evaporation concentrates the food and thus it tastes saltier. If one adds more salt at the beginning then one cannot have a true indication of the saltiness at the end of cooking.
There are salts and minerals that naturally occur in most foods giving them a more salty flavor. Yes, the more processed, such as veggies with sauces and such have more salt, a lot. Yes, one can get low salt veggies in the can, but since salt acts as a preservative it is still used in certain amounts especially in canned, which I rarely buy. Tomatoes can have less salt because of their acidity. If one is like us, and older, it is necessary to watch the salt content of everything. If I butter my veggies I don't add salt because there is salt in the butter if using salted butter. With the various meals we have during the day, sodium adds up. If one eats out, forget it. Most, restaurants add a lot of salt and sugar to the food. I did not say, don't add salt, I said to taste it. Add toward the end of cooking, it is then that one can adjust the seasoning. Hubby hardly ever salts his food and I use very little. He says it is not needed, so everyone is different. His tastes are more sensitive. It has to be adjusted with much less salt because everyone including one's guests tastes are all different. Some like very salty food. My brother, for instance use to salt his fish filets. I never would, I would use lemon. And, I still say, after having done this myself, that one can taste the salt that naturally occurs in some foods if one is not too heavy handed with the salt shaker. One's taste buds can adjust to using less salt. I often use fresh lemon juice and it enhances the saltiness of almost all foods that it can be used on or in, especially fish. And, smokers cannot generally taste their food fully the same as non-smokers. It can take years for smokers to get their taste back fully and then sometimes not very much. Have you ever heard of a food critic that smokes?
If one uses hot sauce or chiles to excess in certain recipes, then the other subtle flavors may be lost. And, I do believe in using herbs and spices in cooking and this also means I need only use a little salt. Once one has been cooking for a long time one does not have to repair a dish now and then, if ever.
 
Gerald5001 April 2, 2014
But what if the food is cooked and then you find out that it is to saltly (not counting soups)?
 
Tereza April 2, 2014
Thanks for sharing these tips! Will definitely come in handy

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sweetlolo April 1, 2014
I recently read a great seasoning correction on the Hotline - someone had posted asking how to correct for too much vinegar in a dish, and it happens I had just made a very (too) vinegary stew. The answer was to add a very small amount of baking soda to neutralize the acid. Worked like a charm. Unfortunately I've forgotten who posted the answer, so can't credit them, but thanks for the great solution.
 
Catherine L. April 1, 2014
That's such a great tip!
 
Jordan M. April 1, 2014
what about over salted cooked meats, like roast chicken, grilled steak or pork chop?
 
Catherine L. April 1, 2014
Those are a lot harder to correct, as there's no real way to dilute them (unless you want to make it into a hash or salad). Try adding citrus or serving with a tart yogurt sauce, or even adding in a bit of sugar or maple syrup to make a glaze.
 
Jordan M. April 1, 2014
Great ideas, thank you!
 
Dlgoldie April 1, 2014
If it's a soup or a saucy dish, remove some of the soup or sauce and replace with stock or broth. Save what you remove and use it as the base for another dish.