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A beautiful salt sprinkled with sapphire blue crystals, this unique and rare salt brings a distinctive salty profile to all of your foods- use sparingly at first until you find your preferred level of salty indulgence. a truly special salt to add to your sea salt offerings.
G**Q
Great taste, Great looks, Great salt
We like salt and have a huge assortment of different kinds. Having never heard of Persian Sapphire Blue, I bought this as a Christmas gift for my son. I like medium coarse salt and thought that the Persian Blue may be too large but it has a much more delicate taste than the typically salt of that size. When I read the description: "A very clean, initially sharp salty flavor evolves into a softer pure salt flavor", I couldn't understand it, but, as another reviewer succinctly wrote "As advertised". Unfortunately, it is very expensive which will make it hard to keep on hand.
A**R
Was not blue
There were about 3 specks of blue in the salt. Bought as gift. They were like “oooh, salt.” Was not blue.
S**N
Pass the salt please
Now I feel good about adding salt back into my diet.
S**M
Interesting
Interesting and unique flavor
J**Z
Five Stars
Great product. Thanks
K**R
Great, healthy salt
Love these Sapphire blue salts. They come in a great jar, with spoon on the side and a cork top. Lasts a long, long time, and the flavor is so distinctive, plus provides necessary rare minerals in the diet.
S**L
Five Stars
As advertised
N**D
blue salt is scientifically toxic
In vitro cyanide release of four prussian blue salts used for the treatment of cesium contaminated persons.Verzijl JM, et al. J Toxicol Clin Toxicol. 1993.Show full citationAbstractPrussian blue salts are used in clinical practice as an antidote for the treatment of humans contaminated with radioactive cesium. A decomposition product of these Prussian blue salts may be the highly toxic cyanide. A method to simulate gastrointestinal cyanide-release was applied to four different Prussian blue salts: K3Fe[Fe(CN)6], Fe4[Fe(CN)6]3, NH4Fe[Fe(CN)6] (pur. and unpur.). Cyanide-release was higher in artificial gastric juice than in water and artificial intestinal juice. Under all conditions cyanide-release from Fe4[Fe(CN)6]3 was the lowest. Since Fe4[Fe(CN)6]3 also binds more cesium, it appears to be the most suitable Prussian blue salt for use as an antidote after radiocesium contamination in humans.
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