Amed is a once-remote village on a beautiful bay in Eastern Bali with waters so clear that coral and fish can be seen with the naked eye. The pace of life here is slow and the coastal scenery stunning.
This is the most recent tourist development area in Bali, now well known for diving and snorkeling. Although only a few years ago that it was a solitary village inhabited only by fishermen and sea-salt processors, nowadays tourism is growing and salt production is declining. We traveled here in search of the salt makers as we are developing a very special product derived from their crystals.
Salt production is very hard work and the painstaking method used in Amed consists of the following steps:
1. Take water from the sea and pour it into prepared soil fields. The salt workers carry the water in double-bucket shoulder poles.
2. Smooth the soil in the fields to allow even drying. Allow salt water to dry / evaporate for three days.
3. Rake the dried, salty soil paddies to break them up.
4. Put broken up soil into wood funnels.
5. Pack down the soil by walking on it inside the funnels.
6. Collect more sea water and pour it over the soil in the funnels.
7. Allow the sea water to seep down through the soil. This soil works as a natural filter.
8. Collect the filtered salty water from below the cones.
9. Pour this water into the drying trays (“palungan”) lined up in rows along the beach.
This technique produces a lower yield than others but the result is a salt prized for its flavor. that caught our attention and trigger a new idea for Cuca. All we can say for now you will love our salty little plan.