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GrooveSAN | 2 years ago

I’ve never found a salt grinder able to sustain the salt corrosion in the long run. Sooner or later, salt is aggregating and turning even the more resistant parts into rust.

I was recently planning to get back to a regular pestle/mortar setup after yet another costly failure. Did you manage to find a way to work this around?

discuss

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vladvasiliu|2 years ago

> I’ve never found a salt grinder able to sustain the salt corrosion in the long run

There are ceramic grinders now. I'd expect those to not rust, but I don't know how long they stay sharp.

erikpukinskis|2 years ago

You can make ceramics harder than the hardest steel so staying sharp shouldn’t be a problem.

sgtnoodle|2 years ago

What timescale are you talking about? I have a William Sonoma salt grinder, as well as one that my friend made for me. They're both about 5 years old. As far as I know there's no significant deterioration on either one. The grinding surfaces are ceramic.

GrooveSAN|2 years ago

Had usually some issues with (metallic) screws or other minor pieces after 1-2 years. Will take a look at ceramic grinders in the future.

czechdeveloper|2 years ago

I use ceramic grinder. No corrosion possible.

phito|2 years ago

I've had a fully plastic one for about 5 years

karakot|2 years ago

Delivering microplastics right into the food since 19xx.

heeen2|2 years ago

we use a cheap ikea grinder, it has ceramic burrs and has undergone countless refills and dishwasher cycles.