Citric acid is easier to cook with than it looks. Here's how to choose, use, and store it, what to substitute, and 7 recipes to get you started.
Citric acid is the tart, white crystalline powder behind the sour bite of lemons and other citrus, sold on its own as a kitchen ingredient. You may know it by its old name, sour salt, because it looks like coarse salt but tastes intensely sour.
A little goes a very long way.
It is a natural acid, today produced by fermenting sugars rather than squeezing fruit, and it dissolves cleanly in water without the pulp, color, or perishability of lemon juice. That makes it a precise, shelf-stable way to add acidity wherever you need it.
Cooks reach for it to sharpen a dish and to control acidity in canning. It also makes candy pucker and curdles milk into fresh cheese.
The simplest use is sharpening flavor. A pinch dissolved into a sauce or dressing lifts the other flavors the way a squeeze of lemon does, but without thinning the dish or adding citrus taste.
Rose's Tomato/Onion Dressing and a pot of Pisnyi Borsch (Meatless Beet Soup) both use it to set that clean, tart edge.
It earns its keep in drinks and candy. Stir it into Helen's Lemonade Syrup for instant tartness, or toss it over Jelly Candies for that mouth-puckering sour coating on gummies and hard sweets.
In baking, it lends the sharp lift behind a Very Key Lime Pie when fresh limes alone are not tart enough. It is also the souring agent in some rye and sourdough-style breads.
For cheese-making it is the curdling agent. Stirred into warm milk, citric acid drops the pH and makes the proteins clump, which is exactly how quick ricotta and fresh mozzarella are made at home.
Start with the smallest amount. Because it is far more concentrated than lemon juice, it is easy to overshoot into an unpleasant, metallic sourness.
In home canning, citric acid is about safety, not just taste. Tomatoes sit right at the borderline pH where dangerous bacteria can grow, so the USDA recommends adding acid to canned tomatoes.
Use ¼ teaspoon of citric acid per pint jar, or ½ teaspoon per quart, to reach a safe acidity level. Lemon juice can do the same job but is weaker by volume.
It pairs naturally with anything that wants brightness without extra liquid, from tomato sauces to fruit preserves and pickled vegetables. Brewers and winemakers also use it to adjust acidity, as Double Stout shows.
The most common mistake is treating it like table salt. The crystals look identical, so taste before you trust the jar, and store the two apart. A teaspoon where you meant a pinch will wreck a dish, and the reverse leaves food flat.
The second mistake is sprinkling it dry onto food and expecting even sourness. It dissolves best in liquid, so for sauces and drinks stir it into the wet ingredients rather than dusting it on top.
The closest everyday swap is fresh lemon or lime juice. It is much weaker, so plan on roughly 1 tablespoon of lemon juice to replace ¼ teaspoon of citric acid, and remember it adds liquid and citrus flavor along with the sourness.
White vinegar works for canning and pickling and brings comparable acidity, though it carries its own tang. For tomatoes specifically, bottled lemon juice is the safer canning substitute because its acidity is standardized, while fresh lemons vary.
Cream of tartar or tartaric acid can mimic the sour note in some candy and baking uses, but they behave differently and are not interchangeable for canning. When acidity is a food-safety issue, stick to citric acid or bottled lemon juice at the tested amounts.
Look for citric acid in the canning or baking aisle, or with kosher and pickling supplies; brewing shops and pharmacies stock it too. Buy food-grade, and check that the label says citric acid rather than a sour salt cut with regular salt.
It is sold as a fine powder or as larger crystals. Both work, but the fine powder dissolves faster, which matters for drinks and quick fixes of acidity.
Citric acid is remarkably shelf-stable. Kept in an airtight container away from moisture, it lasts for years without losing potency, since its main enemy is humidity, which makes it clump.
If it does cake into a hard lump, it is still good; break it up and it will dissolve normally. Store it well away from your salt and sugar so a sour-salt mix-up never happens.
There are 7 recipes that contain this ingredient.
Homemade small batch German sausage from Nürnberg.
Rich, full-bodied homebrew stout made with dark malt extract, roasted barley, and black patent malt for deep chocolate and coffee notes.
Pisnyi borsch is a traditional Ukrainian meatless beet soup with dried boletus mushrooms, root vegetables, and beet kvas for a tart, jewel-toned broth served with vushka dumplings.
Homemade jelly candies with pectin, sugar, corn syrup, and citric acid: customizable molded sweets flavored and colored any way you like. Firm, chewy, and old-fashioned.
Key lime pie loaded with lime zest, juice and a hit of citric acid for an extra-tart punch, set in a ginger crumb crust and crowned with whipped cream. A no-bake, intensely limey twist on the classic.
Old-fashioned homemade lemonade syrup concentrate with citric and tartaric acid. Bottle once, refrigerate, and mix 1:5 with water for instant fresh lemonade all summer.
Fat-free tomato onion dressing blended with sauteed sweet onion, herb vinegar, basil, poppy seeds, celery seeds, and dill. A light, tangy salad dressing with no oil.