Smoked Salt
Quick Facts
- What it is: Sea salt or flake salt cold or hot smoked with various woods
- Smoking time: 4-48 hours depending on method
- Temperature: Cold smoke: 68-86°F, Hot smoke: 200-225°F
- Best woods: Hickory, mesquite, applewood, cherry, oak
- Flavor intensity: Mild to intense depending on wood and duration
- Price range: $8-30 per pound
- Shelf life: 2-5 years properly stored
Wood Types and Flavor Profiles
| Wood Type | Intensity | Flavor Notes | Best Paired With |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hickory | Strong | Bacon-like, savory, bold | Beef, pork, hearty vegetables |
| Mesquite | Very Strong | Earthy, intense, slightly bitter | Red meat, game, BBQ |
| Applewood | Mild | Sweet, fruity, delicate | Poultry, fish, pork, cheese |
| Cherry | Mild-Medium | Sweet, mild, slightly tart | Duck, lamb, vegetables |
| Oak | Medium | Well-rounded, classic smoke | Everything, very versatile |
| Alder | Very Mild | Light, slightly sweet | Fish, seafood, vegetables |
| Pecan | Medium | Nutty, rich, mild spice | Poultry, pork, baked goods |
| Maple | Mild | Sweet, subtle, smooth | Ham, poultry, vegetables |
Cold Smoking vs Hot Smoking
Cold Smoking (68-86°F)
- Duration: 12-48 hours
- Method: Smoke generator or tube
- Result: Deeper smoke penetration
- Texture: Salt stays crisp
- Flavor: More complex, layered
- Best for: Flake salts, coarse crystals
Hot Smoking (200-225°F)
- Duration: 4-8 hours
- Method: Standard smoker
- Result: Surface smoke flavor
- Texture: May clump slightly
- Flavor: More intense, direct
- Best for: Coarse salts
DIY Smoking Methods
Method 1: Stovetop Smoking (Easiest)
- Line wok or deep pan with foil
- Add 2 tbsp wood chips (soaked 30 min)
- Place wire rack above chips
- Spread salt on foil-lined plate on rack
- Cover tightly, smoke on low 30-60 minutes
- Stir every 15 minutes
Method 2: Grill Smoking
- Set up for indirect heat (coals on one side)
- Soak wood chips 30 minutes
- Place chips on coals or in smoker box
- Spread salt in aluminum pan on cool side
- Maintain 200-225°F for 2-4 hours
- Stir hourly for even smoking
Method 3: Cold Smoking with Pellet Tube
- Fill pellet tube with wood pellets
- Light one end, let burn 5 minutes
- Blow out flame (should smolder)
- Place in closed grill with salt spread on sheet
- Cold smoke 12-24 hours
- No heat needed - ambient temperature
⚠️ Important: Never use treated wood, pine, or wood with resin. Only use hardwoods meant for food smoking. Avoid liquid smoke for authentic flavor.
Best Uses by Wood Type
Hickory Smoked
- Grilled steaks
- Burger seasoning
- Roasted vegetables
- Bloody Marys
Applewood Smoked
- Roasted chicken
- Grilled fish
- Caramel desserts
- Cheese plates
Mesquite Smoked
- Texas BBQ
- Fajitas
- Chili
- Grilled corn
Cherry Smoked
- Duck breast
- Pork tenderloin
- Dark chocolate
- Stone fruits
Quality Indicators
Signs of Real Smoked Salt:
- Natural color variations (not uniform)
- Smoky aroma when jar opened
- Slightly darker than original salt
- Complex flavor beyond just "smoke"
- Wood type specified on label
- No "smoke flavoring" in ingredients
Red Flags (Fake Smoked Salt):
- Lists "liquid smoke" or "smoke flavor"
- Unnaturally dark or uniform color
- Artificial or chemical smell
- Very cheap (under $5/lb)
- No wood type mentioned
Popular Smoked Salt Brands
| Brand | Wood Types | Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maldon Smoked | Oak | $12-15/8.5oz | Cold smoked flakes, very mild |
| Jacobsen Salt Co. | Cherrywood | $16-20/4oz | Hand-harvested, slow smoked |
| The Spice Lab | Various | $10-15/lb | Multiple wood options |
| SaltWorks | Alderwood, others | $8-12/lb | Bulk options available |
| Frontier Co-op | Hickory, Mesquite | $8-10/4oz | Organic options |
Storage and Shelf Life
- Container: Airtight glass or ceramic (plastic absorbs smoke flavor)
- Location: Cool, dark, dry place
- Humidity: Keep below 70% to prevent clumping
- Shelf life: 2-5 years (flavor fades over time)
- Don't store near: Strong spices (cross-contamination)
Creative Uses
Beyond Basic Seasoning:
- Rim cocktails: Mezcal, bourbon, Bloody Marys
- Finish chocolate: Dark chocolate truffles, brownies
- Popcorn: Movie night upgrade
- Compound butter: Mix into softened butter
- Grilled fruit: Peaches, pineapple, watermelon
- Ice cream: Salted caramel, vanilla
- Eggs: Deviled eggs, scrambled, fried
- Finishing oil: Infuse olive oil
Nutritional Information
Smoked salt has identical nutritional content to the base salt used:
- Sodium: ~390mg per gram
- Calories: 0
- Added compounds: Trace phenols from smoke (antioxidants)
- Carcinogens: Minimal in cold-smoked, slightly higher in hot-smoked
Environmental Considerations
- Choose brands using sustainable wood sources
- Cold smoking uses less energy than hot
- DIY smoking reduces packaging waste
- Avoid brands using liquid smoke (petroleum-derived)
- Support local salt producers when possible