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Book review: Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat (Samin Nosrat)

Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat

My introduction to the now celebrity chef Samin Nosrat was through Michael Pollan’s book Cooked. Soon after she started making appearances in several of the podcasts I listen to. She talked about her culinary story, which led to the book Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat: Mastering The Elements Of Good Cooking and the Netflix show of the same name.

The author

Samin Nosrat is a writer, teacher and chef, born to Iranian parents who migrated to the US. Samin started her professional cooking career in the prestigious Californian restaurant Chez Panise without having done any formal culinary education. For more details on this story, listen to any of her interviews or read her book.

Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat

The front of the book contains praise from food personalities such as Alice Waters, Yotam Ottolenghi and Heidi Swanson (one of the first food bloggers and writers I followed). The foreword was written by Michael Pollan, Samin’s writing teacher and cooking student.

This is one of the few books I own in audio and written (Kindle) version. I like the audiobook because it’s narrated by Samin and I really enjoy her way of telling stories. However, the written book contains a ton of illustrations, only some of which come in the audiobook’s complementary PDF. The artwork was created by Wendy MacNaughton and is both useful and beautiful.

Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat is divided in two parts, the first of which deals with the four elements. The second section, abridged in the audio version for obvious reasons, contains recipes and recommendations.

Part one: The Four Elements of Good Cooking

Every one of the four chapters starts with a story of how that element became relevant in the author’s mind.

For each element you can expect a description of what the element is, what types you can find, how it works (chemically, physically), how it affects different foods, how you can layer the element (e.g. use more than one kind to affect flavour or texture), and how to balance it.

There is a section on improvising with the elements, which builds on the previous elements. In other words, you will learn how to improvise with salt, salt + fat, salt + fat + acid, and salt + fat + acid + heat.

As mentioned before, there are illustrations that explain key concepts, such as:

This section ends with the concept of anchoring when deciding on a menu, which is pretty much how I plan all my menus. Anchoring means choosing a single element (an ingredient, a cooking technique, a cuisine, time/resource limit, etc.) and building the rest of the menu around that element.

Finally, Samin gives advice on using recipes. Some of my favourite quotes come from this section (see below).

Part Two: Recipes and Recommendations

This part contains recommendations on kitchen basics: choosing tools (knives, spatulas, pans, etc.) and ingredients.

There are also useful illustrations on:

And finally, there are recipes. Samin has said many times that her intention was to write a book without recipes since the premise is that by knowing how to play with the elements (salt, fat, acid, heat), you can cook pretty much anything. However, people wanted recipes, and she delivered.

And just in case you want more, the author ends with further reading suggestions.

My favourite quotes

Below are some of the quotes in Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat that stuck with me the most:

On salt

On fat

On acid

On heat

On cooking

On using recipes

More info

Find more about Samin on her website and more about the TV show here.

You can also learn more about Wendy MacNaughton’s work on her website.


This website is for educational and informational purposes only. Click here if you need personalised nutrition advice.

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