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Salting pasta water barely changes boiling point. Why still do it?

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Answer: Season noodles inside

Boil much hotterCommon myth, but the boiling-point change is tiny at cooking concentrations. That is not enough to explain better pasta. The more useful lesson is scale: a chemistry fact can be true and still too small to matter much at dinner.

Season noodles insideRight. Salt goes in because pasta absorbs water as it cooks, so the noodle itself gets seasoned before sauce arrives. Britannica says salt primarily seasons pasta directly, while the boiling-point change is minimal. The timing matters because the seasoning happens while water is moving into the pasta.

Stop starch swellingNo. Salt at normal pasta-water levels does not freeze starch swelling in place. Starch still hydrates and gelatinizes; that is how pasta cooks. The useful control knob for texture is timing, stirring, and stopping near al dente, not trying to chemically lock starch with salt.

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