Flavored Salt Recipes from Garden Herbs

Coarse and versatile, herb-infused salt recipes add a flavorful accent to many dishes.

By Juliet Blankespoor
Updated on September 4, 2023
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by HarperCollins Publishers/Juliet
One salt does not fit all, and these three recipes will introduce you to a range of salt types.

Flavored salt recipes are a nice way to preserve culinary herbs. These three infused salt recipes include a wood-smoked salt, lemon-sage salt, and sesame gomasio.

We live in extraordinary times, with a dazzling array of salts that are smoky, volcanic, or kissed by the subtle flavors of seaweed and minerals. Herb-infused salt recipes are a delightful alchemy between earth and sea, plant and mineral. Herbal salts are surprisingly easy to conjure up. In early fall, I prepare big batches of salts from the herbs I harvest before the first frost. If your love language involves homemade holiday gifts, as mine does, you’ll appreciate having a pantry full of finishing salts in pretty little jars ready for birthdays and holiday gift-giving.

Finishing salts get their name from their kitchen use, traditionally added to a dish after it’s prepared. But you needn’t be held back by this convention — as long as you understand how salt behaves. Coarser salts, with a larger flake, add a gust of crunch and saltiness, but if you add them earlier in the cooking process, the salt dissolves and loses its texture. A finer grain provides more even distribution, for times when you don’t want splashes of saltiness.

Experiment with salt textures, and you’ll be a more dexterous cook. Add herbal salts to marinades and dressings or rub them onto meats and seafood before roasting, grilling, or pan-frying. I enjoy my finishing salts daily on popcorn, eggs, and beans. When I need a quick party trick, I add herbal salts to goat cheese and drizzle in olive oil, resulting in a salty, creamy dip. Herb-infused salt recipes are so central to the life of my kitchen that they live next to the stove, coming out to play at nearly every mealtime. It’s all too easy to overdo it with these salt blends if you treat them like herbal seasoning and add liberal amounts to food. They’re genuinely salty, so go easy at first!

Make Your Own Flavored Salt Recipes

Himalayan pink salt and Real Salt (from Utah) are mined from ancient marine fossil deposits; their rosy hue is derived from a high content of minerals and trace elements. If you’re concerned about microplastics in your sea salt — and, yes, sadly, this can be a concern — these mountain-mined salts are a good choice. Substitute Himalayan pink salt for Real Salt in the recipes below, if needed.

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