The Pickle Salt Obsession: Your New Favorite Kitchen Crunch (Flaky Sea Salt, You Have Competition)

Let’s be honest. We’ve all been there. You finish the last glorious, garlicky spear from the jar, and you’re left staring at that sad, pickle-less brine. Your heart says, “Toss it,” but your inner food-hoarder soul screams, “WAIT. There has to be something!” Enter the unsung hero of the pantry: pickle salt.

This isn’t just about recycling brine (though Mother Earth approves). This is about creating a flavor bomb so addictive, you’ll start pickling things just to make more of the salt. Imagine a seasoning that’s tangy, garlicky, a little dilly, and packs an umami punch that makes everything taste like the best potato chip you’ve ever had. That’s pickle salt. It’s the secret weapon your popcorn, grilled chicken, and avocado toast have been desperately waiting for.

So, grab that almost-empty jar, and let’s turn your leftover pickle juice from a sad puddle into a culinary superstar. Trust me, once you start, you’ll never look at a pickle jar the same way again.

A Quick Nutritional Note & How to “Serve” This Stuff

Before we dive in, let’s talk logistics. Pickle salt is a condiment, not a main course. You’re using it as a flavor-packed sprinkle, so a “serving” is typically about 1/4 to 1/2 a teaspoon.

Here’s the basic deal, nutritionally speaking:

  • The star is salt, so the primary nutrients are sodium.
  • The pickle brine adds minimal calories (maybe 1-2 per serving) and a trace amount of vinegar’s probiotics.
  • The spices and seeds add negligible calories but loads of flavor.
  • The real benefit? It makes you use less plain salt because it’s so flavorful, and it jazz up healthy, simple foods (like steamed veggies or grilled fish) so you actually want to eat them.

Think of it as a seasoning boost, not a food group. Now, onto the fun part!


1. The Classic Dill Pickle Salt (Your Gateway Drug)

This is the one that starts it all. The perfect, zingy, all-purpose sprinkle that will have you putting it on everything from eggs to ice cream. (Okay, maybe not ice cream. But I won’t judge.)

Makes: About 1 cup of seasoning salt.
Serving Size: 1/4 teaspoon (approx.)
Per Serving: Calories: <5, Sodium: ~480mg, Fat: 0g, Carbs: 0g, Protein: 0g.
(Note: Sodium will vary based on salt type and brine. This is a high-sodium condiment—a little goes a long way!)

Ingredients

  • 1 cup coarse sea salt or kosher salt (Don’t use fine table salt—it will clump into a brick!)
  • ½ cup leftover dill pickle brine (the stuff from a classic garlic-dill pickle jar)
  • 1 tsp dried dill weed
  • ½ tsp garlic powder
  • Optional: ¼ tsp cracked black pepper or a pinch of red pepper flakes for heat.

The Gear That Helps:
Want the perfect coarse salt base? I always keep a big box of Diamond Crystal Kosher Salt on hand. Its light, flaky crystals are IDEAL for absorbing brine and creating that perfect crunchy texture. For storing your masterpiece, a set of glass spice jars with shaker lids is a game-changer. They look chic and keep your salt bone-dry.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Preheat your oven to 250°F (120°C). Line a baking sheet with parchment paper (a pre-cut parchment sheet roll is a lifesaver here, just saying).
  2. In a medium bowl, pour the pickle brine over the coarse salt. Stir it like you mean it, ensuring every crystal gets a little damp. Let it sit for 10 minutes so the salt soaks up all that tangy goodness.
  3. Spread the damp salt mixture in a thin, even layer on your prepared baking sheet.
  4. Bake for 45-60 minutes, stirring every 15 minutes. You’re looking for the salt to be completely dry and crumbly again. It should feel like… well, dry salt.
  5. Let the salt cool completely on the sheet. Then, crumble it into a bowl and mix in the dried dill and garlic powder (and optional spices). Store it in your fancy airtight jar.

Why You’ll Love It

This is your workhorse. It’s phenomenal on roasted potatoes (life-changing, IMO), perfect for rimming a Bloody Mary glass, and absolutely killer on buttered popcorn. I once made the mistake of putting a shaker of this on the table during a dinner party. Let’s just say the roast chicken was more seasoned than intended, but zero regrets.


2. The “Everything But The Pickle” Bagel Salt

Love everything bagel seasoning? Meet its tangier, more interesting cousin. This salt has texture, crunch, and a sour kick that makes a plain cream cheese schmear feel like a gourmet event.

Makes: About 1 1/4 cups of seasoning salt.
Serving Size: 1/2 teaspoon (approx.)
Per Serving: Calories: ~10, Sodium: ~350mg, Fat: 1g, Carbs: 1g, Protein: 0g.
(The seeds add a tiny bit of healthy fats and calories, making it more of a “topper.”)

Ingredients

  • 1 cup of your prepared Classic Dill Pickle Salt (see above, you’re a pro now)
  • 2 tbsp dried minced onion
  • 2 tbsp dried minced garlic
  • 2 tbsp white sesame seeds
  • 1 tbsp black sesame seeds (or poppy seeds if you’re in a pinch)
  • 1 tbsp coarse flake salt for extra texture

The Gear That Helps:
For toasting those tiny seeds without burning them, a good heavy-bottomed stainless steel skillet is key—it distributes heat evenly. To get uniform minced onion and garlic every time, I love using a brand like Frontier Co-op for their organic dried spices. And for the final flaky salt texture, a bag of Maldon Sea Salt Flakes is worth every penny for the finishing touch.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Make your Classic Dill Pickle Salt first. Let it cool completely—this is non-negotiable unless you want soggy seeds. Nobody wants that.
  2. In your dry skillet over medium-low heat, toast the white sesame seeds, black sesame seeds, dried onion, and dried garlic. Stir constantly for 2-3 minutes until fragrant. Let this mixture cool too.
  3. In your storage jar, combine the cool pickle salt, the cool toasted seed/onion mix, and the extra flake salt. Put the lid on and shake it like a polaroid picture until everything is beautifully combined.

Why You’ll Love It

This isn’t just for bagels. Sprinkle it over avocado toast, use it as a crust for baked salmon, or dust it over a simple cucumber salad. It adds a crazy amount of flavor and a fantastic crunch. FYI, it also makes a genuinely awesome gift. Whip up a batch, put it in a cute jar, and suddenly you’re the fancy friend who makes homemade gourmet ingredients. 🙂


3. The Sweet & Spicy Bread & Butter Pickle Salt

Think pickle salt is only for savory things? Hold my jar. This version, made from the brine of those lovely sweet bread & butter pickles, is a wild card you need in your life. It’s the surprising twist that makes people go, “Wait, what is that?!”

Makes: About 1 cup of seasoning salt.
Serving Size: 1/4 teaspoon (approx.)
Per Serving: Calories: <5, Sodium: ~480mg, Fat: 0g, Carbs: 1g (from the sweet brine), Protein: 0g.
(A hint of sweetness balances the salt in the most delightful way.)

Ingredients

  • 1 cup coarse sea salt or kosher salt
  • ½ cup leftover bread & butter pickle brine
  • 1 tsp mustard seeds
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika (not regular—smoked is key here)
  • A tiny pinch of turmeric for color (optional, but it gives a great golden hue)

The Gear That Helps:
The secret to this recipe’s deep flavor is the smoked paprika. I’m a loyalist to La Dalia Smoked Paprika – it has an incredible, warm aroma that regular paprika just can’t match. For mustard seeds, buying a small glass jar like Simply Organic Mustard Seed means they stay fresh for ages. And for measuring those tiny pinches of turmeric without staining your measuring spoons, a set of mini measuring spoons is a tiny but mighty helpful tool.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Follow the same drying process as the classic recipe: combine salt and brine, let it soak, spread on parchment, and bake at 250°F until bone-dry.
  2. While the salt is baking, toast the mustard seeds in a small dry pan for about 60 seconds until they start to pop. Set aside.
  3. Once the salt is cool, mix in the toasted mustard seeds, smoked paprika, and turmeric (if using). The result is a gorgeous, speckled, sweet-and-savory blend.

Why You’ll Love It

This is your secret weapon for summer foods. It’s insane on grilled corn on the cob (butter + this salt = magic). It transforms a simple grilled pork chop. And honestly? A tiny sprinkle over vanilla bean ice cream or a fruit salad is a revelatory sweet-salty-sour experience. Don’t knock it till you’ve tried it.


4. The “Speedy Gonzales” No-Bake Pickle Salt

“But I want pickle salt NOW!” I hear you, impatient foodie. This is for those times when you need instant gratification. It skips the baking and gets you to the flavor, fast.

Makes: About 1 cup of seasoning salt.
Serving Size: 1/4 teaspoon (approx.)
Per Serving: Calories: <5, Sodium: ~480mg, Fat: 0g, Carbs: 0g, Protein: 0g.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup already-dry flaky finishing salt (like Maldon) or coarse salt
  • 2-3 tbsp powdered pickle brine (see pro-tip below!)
  • ½ tsp dried dill

The Gear That Helps:
This recipe is where a food dehydrator shines. A basic model like the COSORI Food Dehydrator makes quick, foolproof work of turning brine into powder. If you’re going the air-dry route, using Silicone Dehydrator Sheets on a tray is brilliant—the brine pops right off when dry. And of course, you’ll need that high-quality flaky salt as your base.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Make the Powdered Brine (The Magic Step): Pour leftover pickle brine into a thin layer on a dehydrator sheet or a parchment-lined plate. Dehydrate at 135°F until completely crystallized (or let air-dry for a day or two in a super low-humidity spot). Crumble it into a powder. This is your concentrated pickle punch.
  2. In a jar, combine the flaky salt, powdered pickle brine, and dill. Seal and shake vigorously. Taste and add more pickle powder if you want more tang.

Why You’ll Love It

It’s ready in minutes if you have the pickle powder pre-made. The texture from the flaky salt is incredible, and it’s perfect for finishing dishes right before serving. It keeps that bright, sharp pickle flavor beautifully. Think of it as the fast-food version of pickle salt—sometimes, you just need the drive-thru experience.

So, What’s the Big Dill?

See what I did there? 🙂 The beautiful thing about pickle salt is that it’s less of a strict recipe and more of a concept. Once you get the basic method down—infuse salt with brine, dry it out, add extras—you can run wild. Had some jalapeño pickle juice? Make a spicy version. Finished a jar of pickled beets? A stunning pink salt awaits.

You’re not just making a seasoning. You’re practicing kitchen alchemy, reducing waste, and creating a condiment with more personality than most things in your fridge. It’s cheap, it’s easy, and it instantly makes you look like a flavor genius.

Remember: These are potent flavor boosters. A light sprinkle is all you need to transform a dish. They’re high in sodium, but you’ll likely use less overall because the flavor is so concentrated.

So next time you’re at the bottom of the jar, don’t pour that liquid gold down the drain. Give it a second life as the crunchiest, tangiest, most conversation-starting salt your kitchen counter has ever seen. Your taste buds (and that lonely pickle jar) will thank you. Now, go forth and get salty!


Pickle Salt

The Classic Dill Pickle Salt

The foundational, tangy, garlic-dill pickle salt that's perfect on everything from popcorn to roasted veggies.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings: 1 Cup of Seasoning Salt
Course: Seasoning
Calories: -5

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup coarse sea salt or kosher salt Don’t use fine table salt—it will clump into a brick!
  • ½ cup leftover dill pickle brine the stuff from a classic garlic-dill pickle jar
  • 1 tsp dried dill weed
  • ½ tsp garlic powder
  • Optional: ¼ tsp cracked black pepper or a pinch of red pepper flakes for heat.

Method
 

  1. Preheat your oven to 250°F (120°C). Line a baking sheet with parchment paper (a pre-cut parchment sheet roll is a lifesaver here, just saying).
  2. In a medium bowl, pour the pickle brine over the coarse salt. Stir it like you mean it, ensuring every crystal gets a little damp. Let it sit for 10 minutes so the salt soaks up all that tangy goodness.
  3. Spread the damp salt mixture in a thin, even layer on your prepared baking sheet.
  4. Bake for 45-60 minutes, stirring every 15 minutes. You’re looking for the salt to be completely dry and crumbly again. It should feel like… well, dry salt.
  5. Let the salt cool completely on the sheet. Then, crumble it into a bowl and mix in the dried dill and garlic powder (and optional spices). Store it in your fancy airtight jar.

Notes

The key is using coarse salt; fine table salt will solidify. This salt keeps indefinitely in an airtight jar in a cool, dry pantry. Stirring every 15 minutes during baking is crucial for even drying.
Pickle Salt

The “Everything But The Pickle” Bagel Salt

Love everything bagel seasoning? Meet its tangier, more interesting cousin. This salt has texture, crunch, and a sour kick that makes a plain cream cheese schmear feel like a gourmet event.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Total Time 10 minutes
Servings: 1 1/4 Cups of Seasoning Salt
Course: Seasoning
Calories: -10

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup of your prepared Classic Dill Pickle Salt see above, you’re a pro now
  • 2 tbsp dried minced onion
  • 2 tbsp dried minced garlic
  • 2 tbsp white sesame seeds
  • 1 tbsp black sesame seeds or poppy seeds if you’re in a pinch
  • 1 tbsp coarse flake salt for extra texture

Method
 

  1. Make your Classic Dill Pickle Salt first. Let it cool completely—this is non-negotiable unless you want soggy seeds. Nobody wants that.
  2. In your dry skillet over medium-low heat, toast the white sesame seeds, black sesame seeds, dried onion, and dried garlic. Stir constantly for 2-3 minutes until fragrant. Let this mixture cool too.
  3. In your storage jar, combine the cool pickle salt, the cool toasted seed/onion mix, and the extra flake salt. Put the lid on and shake it like a polaroid picture until everything is beautifully combined.

Notes

Ensure your base pickle salt is COMPLETELY cool before mixing in the toasted seeds and aromatics to prevent sogginess. The toasting step is non-negotiable for maximum flavor.

The Sweet & Spicy Bread & Butter Pickle Salt

A uniquely sweet, smoky, and tangy salt made from bread & butter pickle brine, perfect for grilled foods and surprising dessert pairings.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings: 1 Cup of Seasoning Salt
Course: Seasoning
Calories: -5

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup coarse sea salt or kosher salt
  • ½ cup leftover bread & butter pickle brine
  • 1 tsp mustard seeds
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika not regular—smoked is key here
  • A tiny pinch of turmeric for color optional, but it gives a great golden hue

Method
 

  1. Follow the same drying process as the classic recipe: combine salt and brine, let it soak, spread on parchment, and bake at 250°F until bone-dry.
  2. While the salt is baking, toast the mustard seeds in a small dry pan for about 60 seconds until they start to pop. Set aside.
  3. Once the salt is cool, mix in the toasted mustard seeds, smoked paprika, and turmeric (if using). The result is a gorgeous, speckled, sweet-and-savory blend.

Notes

Smoked paprika is essential here—don’t substitute with regular sweet paprika. The mustard seeds add a wonderful pop of texture and mild heat.
pickle salt

The “Speedy Gonzales” No-Bake Pickle Salt

An instant, no-bake version of pickle salt using dehydrated brine powder for immediate flavor gratification.
Prep Time 2 minutes
Total Time 2 minutes
Servings: 1 Cup of Seasoning Salt
Course: Seasoning
Calories: -5

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup already-dry flaky finishing salt like Maldon or coarse salt
  • 2-3 tbsp powdered pickle brine see pro-tip below!
  • ½ tsp dried dill

Method
 

  1. Make the Powdered Brine (The Magic Step): Pour leftover pickle brine into a thin layer on a dehydrator sheet or a parchment-lined plate. Dehydrate at 135°F until completely crystallized (or let air-dry for a day or two in a super low-humidity spot). Crumble it into a powder. This is your concentrated pickle punch.
  2. In a jar, combine the flaky salt, powdered pickle brine, and dill. Seal and shake vigorously. Taste and add more pickle powder if you want more tang.

Notes

Making the brine powder ahead of time in a dehydrator or low oven is the main time investment. Once you have the powder, this recipe is instant. Great for finishing dishes.

Handy Gear for Your Pickle Salt Adventures

Want to make the process even easier? Here are a few of my favorite tools and ingredients I use all the time. (Full disclosure: These are Amazon affiliate links. If you grab something through these links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. It’s a great way to support the free recipes you find here!)

For the Salt & Storage:

For the “Everything But The Pickle” Salt:

For the Sweet & Spicy Salt:

For the “Speedy Gonzales” Method:

See more recipes Here!!