How to Save Overly Salty Tapenade

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I made a tapenade with the following ingredients: kalamata olives, capers, anchovy, garlic, thyme, lemon, olive oil. Although I rinsed the olives and capers (as per the recipe) the result is pretty salty. It's not inedible but would be a lot better if there was something to counter the saltiness even if it doesn't end up tasting like a traditional tapenade. I just want it to be eaten! Any suggestions what I can add?



Best Answer

Ideas:

  1. Veer into pesto. You could add walnuts or pine nuts and basil pesto style. This would be a good pasta sauce. I would eat it right now.

  2. Stretch it out with chopped spinach or arugala.

  3. Thin it with cheese. A dip with your tapenade and feta cheese or a mild blue cheese 50/50 would be dynamite. Or just with plain yogurt, which is very unsalty.

  4. Top a pizza with it.




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Quick Answer about "How to Save Overly Salty Tapenade"

  • Add more acid. This recipe already calls for multiple forms of acid, but try adding a little more balsamic vinegar or lemon juice to taste! ...
  • Add more fat. ...
  • Add in other non-salty foods. ...
  • Refrigerate overnight.


  • How do you counteract too much salt in a sauce?

    Dilute: If you are making a sauce that seems way too salty, dilute it with water, stock or more of the main ingredient. For example, if you are making a tomato sauce that is too salty, pop in another jar of tomatoes and then add in small amounts of the other ingredients, minus the salt, to fix it up.

    Does sugar fix salty food?

    Speaking of bread and butter pickles, you can sometimes counteract slightly salty foods with a bit of sugar. A pinch of sugar (brown or white), honey or molasses or even the addition of a sweet ingredient can sometimes balance out salty food.



    How to rescue a salty dish




    More answers regarding how to Save Overly Salty Tapenade

    Answer 2

    My 2 Euro-Cents worth:

    1. Easy - Serve it with something un- or under-salted. Parsley or spinach are great at this sort of thing. You're not eating it with a spoon, so you can add some greens to your sandwich.
    2. Medium Effort - Puree some fresh parsley and mix it in. Parsley is famously good at soaking up salt. Note that this will not only change the flavour of your tapenade, but will also significantly shorten how long it can be kept.
    3. High touch - Get some more olives, drain them and soak in fresh cold water for a few hours. This will leach the salt out of them slowly. Then chop/puree the olives and mix into the tapenade to balance it out.

    Answer 3

    we've been taste-trained to accept balsamic in lots of places where sweetness isn't the norm

    it's possible that mixing in just enough (2 parts grocery store balsamic vinegar to 1 part white vinegar) to tone down the salt without it tasting noticeably sweeter would do the trick, but be careful because sweet tapenade isn't tapenade any more

    if it's on something oily or acidic, just using less tapenade per serving might do the trick without making any changes to the tapenade

    Answer 4

    According to the chefs of Bon Appetite magazine, the following are steps you can potentially take when you over-salt your food, in general:

    • Add acid (e.g. vinegar, lemon juice)
    • Make more of the food to dilute it with
    • Add greens
    • Add fat to coat the taste buds
    • Add sugar (if it makes sense in the dish, which it might not in this particular case)
    • Under season other elements of the meal

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: ready made, Karolina Grabowska, Artem Beliaikin, Thirdman